Hi folks, just joined. Sorry for this long post. I have read a bunch of threads on this, but still……I'm a decent DIY mechanic with lots of automotive experience and I owned a diesel car for a long time. My neighbor's husband passed away and they have a B7200, 4WD which will not start. Don't know the year. It was running fine about 4 weeks ago. Fuel tank is full, fuel cock is open, fuel reaches the sediment bowl (removed and cleaned a bit of crud) throttle and shutoff cable are free, compression release cable is broken but I can move the lever by hand fine. Crank speed seems fine (I charged the battery) and I can tell a difference in crank speed when compression release is engaged. When cranking, I get no white smoke out the stack. So no fuel, right?
I read the manual. I have tried bleeding by cranking for 10+ seconds with the “air vent" plug screw open and the engine stop pulled. (also tried without engine stop pulled!) Question, should fuel come out at/near that bleed vent when fuel reaches that point? So far no fuel has come out from that air vent plug screw. Next – glow plugs. I can not see the glow indicator glowing when I turn the key counterclockwise to glow. However, with my voltmeter on the battery, and I switch to glowing (without cranking) there is a significant drop in voltage, telling me that the glow plugs are actually working. I cleaned wiring to 2 of the 3 plugs which were more easily accessible. I see in manuals, etc. that the glow plug indicator is called the glow plug controller. Question – can the glow plugs work without the glow plug indicator controller working? But anyway since no white smoke, even if the glow plugs are working fine, I would think no start.
I can see the rocker shaft moving fine through the oil fill cap hole when cranking.
My next steps will be to replace the fuel filter and the sediment bowl seal, in case air is being drawn in there. However I do not think that this was an issue as the tractor was running a few weeks ago. But since I now opened it, it needs to be bled again. Next step after that will be to crack fuel lines at the injectors to see if I can get fuel up there. I’m still concerned that I got no fuel to the bleed vent screw, if that is supposed to happen.
Last diag info I can provide. It was mid 40’s outside while I was working on her. Please forgive me, but I gave her a small whiff of starting fluid, and cranked without glow plugs, hoping to get at least one pop. Got nothing – zilch – nada. Not even a single pop. So I did not want to try starting fluid again, knowing that for some engines it is not a good thing. The fact that I got no firing at all bothers me.
Question. Apparently there is a start interlock of some kind requiring the clutch to be engaged when starting? I would assume this would prevent cranking, but not prevent starting? I tried everything with and without the clutch engaged, and it did not change anything. I assume that the tractor could be started without someone in the seat pushing the clutch, providing it’s in neutral. Can any start interlocks prevent starting when cranking? It cranks just fine….
I’ve seen one vid online where a cover plate on the injection pump is removed to free up a lever arm inside, but I’d rather not go there since the tractor was running fine not that long ago.
TIA,
Allgonquin
I read the manual. I have tried bleeding by cranking for 10+ seconds with the “air vent" plug screw open and the engine stop pulled. (also tried without engine stop pulled!) Question, should fuel come out at/near that bleed vent when fuel reaches that point? So far no fuel has come out from that air vent plug screw. Next – glow plugs. I can not see the glow indicator glowing when I turn the key counterclockwise to glow. However, with my voltmeter on the battery, and I switch to glowing (without cranking) there is a significant drop in voltage, telling me that the glow plugs are actually working. I cleaned wiring to 2 of the 3 plugs which were more easily accessible. I see in manuals, etc. that the glow plug indicator is called the glow plug controller. Question – can the glow plugs work without the glow plug indicator controller working? But anyway since no white smoke, even if the glow plugs are working fine, I would think no start.
I can see the rocker shaft moving fine through the oil fill cap hole when cranking.
My next steps will be to replace the fuel filter and the sediment bowl seal, in case air is being drawn in there. However I do not think that this was an issue as the tractor was running a few weeks ago. But since I now opened it, it needs to be bled again. Next step after that will be to crack fuel lines at the injectors to see if I can get fuel up there. I’m still concerned that I got no fuel to the bleed vent screw, if that is supposed to happen.
Last diag info I can provide. It was mid 40’s outside while I was working on her. Please forgive me, but I gave her a small whiff of starting fluid, and cranked without glow plugs, hoping to get at least one pop. Got nothing – zilch – nada. Not even a single pop. So I did not want to try starting fluid again, knowing that for some engines it is not a good thing. The fact that I got no firing at all bothers me.
Question. Apparently there is a start interlock of some kind requiring the clutch to be engaged when starting? I would assume this would prevent cranking, but not prevent starting? I tried everything with and without the clutch engaged, and it did not change anything. I assume that the tractor could be started without someone in the seat pushing the clutch, providing it’s in neutral. Can any start interlocks prevent starting when cranking? It cranks just fine….
I’ve seen one vid online where a cover plate on the injection pump is removed to free up a lever arm inside, but I’d rather not go there since the tractor was running fine not that long ago.
TIA,
Allgonquin