Good morning and I have a 2 fold q1uestion and wondering if they are related.
My 2100 has 801 hours on it and the previous owner was not great about its ongoing maintenance. I have cleaned the fuel filter and its clean as a whistle, the air cleaner is out (only while in my shop and I do diagnostics). The engine shows no signs of being molested or apart in its life. Whe3n the engine is running after being warmed up the only time I see any exhaust smoke is when making a hard turn with the mower deck engaged and it is not excessive. The tractor seems to have good power for mowing and use in 4WD with mower engaged. I can maintain about 2450 RPM when the mid PTO is engaged.
The tractor shows approx 7 ohms of resistance on the jumper strip for the glow plugs to ground. With the ignition switch turned to glow plug warm up and the glow plugs attached I only register 9.6-9.8 VDC on a good charged battery.
First: It takes 3-5 minutes of cranking to get the tractor to even start to act like it will run and that is only with the throttle in the idle position. And it is belching black smoke like mad ( i know black smoke on startup can be normal) but this seems almost excessive. Sometimes the cranking is so prolonged, I have to use jumper cables to get it to finish cranking to start. If i shut the tractor off after it has been run 30 minutes to use restroom or get a drink, it takes even longer to get it restarted.
Second: I have now started leaving the tractor at an idle when i need to get off, and when I do the blow by on the left side of the engine from the breather tube that appears to be going to the valve cover is voluminous. Its a not wet to the touch and not black in color just gray and its unreal how much is expelled through the breather tube.
I am looking for advice, are these 2 issues related or stand alone issues? Should I be looking at a valve adjustment ( if even possible)? Is this an issue related to the injectors or glow plugs? I do have the WSM for the tractor, but before I tear it half apart I would like some expert opinions as to where to start.
Many thanks
Bill in NW Missouri
My 2100 has 801 hours on it and the previous owner was not great about its ongoing maintenance. I have cleaned the fuel filter and its clean as a whistle, the air cleaner is out (only while in my shop and I do diagnostics). The engine shows no signs of being molested or apart in its life. Whe3n the engine is running after being warmed up the only time I see any exhaust smoke is when making a hard turn with the mower deck engaged and it is not excessive. The tractor seems to have good power for mowing and use in 4WD with mower engaged. I can maintain about 2450 RPM when the mid PTO is engaged.
The tractor shows approx 7 ohms of resistance on the jumper strip for the glow plugs to ground. With the ignition switch turned to glow plug warm up and the glow plugs attached I only register 9.6-9.8 VDC on a good charged battery.
First: It takes 3-5 minutes of cranking to get the tractor to even start to act like it will run and that is only with the throttle in the idle position. And it is belching black smoke like mad ( i know black smoke on startup can be normal) but this seems almost excessive. Sometimes the cranking is so prolonged, I have to use jumper cables to get it to finish cranking to start. If i shut the tractor off after it has been run 30 minutes to use restroom or get a drink, it takes even longer to get it restarted.
Second: I have now started leaving the tractor at an idle when i need to get off, and when I do the blow by on the left side of the engine from the breather tube that appears to be going to the valve cover is voluminous. Its a not wet to the touch and not black in color just gray and its unreal how much is expelled through the breather tube.
I am looking for advice, are these 2 issues related or stand alone issues? Should I be looking at a valve adjustment ( if even possible)? Is this an issue related to the injectors or glow plugs? I do have the WSM for the tractor, but before I tear it half apart I would like some expert opinions as to where to start.
Many thanks
Bill in NW Missouri