p.p.s: did you have another look at this small spring? Do you not have pictures when you took everything apart?
Yes I listen, that spring is holding and you can feel the tension on the throttle
On my L185 it is pulled to the right (looking from the front of the engine) to provide zero compression and then when released there is a spring that pulls it back to the left and allows compression in all cylinders.
Yes yes I remembered, a year or so ago, you walked me through how to use that knob, I did NOT have it far enough in the proper direction to lose compression, but I updated the video after your post showing it spinning without compression
Further to that I think that your engine is spinning slowly and might not be able to fire off. There is no magic RPM for starting since I have gotten mine started on a nearly dead battery but yours seemed “slow”.
May need to charge the battery overnight or use two batteries to get it spinning faster?
Yes I elaborate on the entire setup now and maybe someone can trace an issue/problem, and soon I post pictures for yall to visualize it
Pickup truck is running with GOOD copper 6 gauge to a battery sitting next to the tractor, charging it, stays connected to it so it keeps it strong
Then I have 2 gauge wires coming from tractor, block and starter + terminal going to that battery on the ground
I will test voltage when pickup truck is running and see what the voltage is at the starter of the tractor
It seems that compression is so high, that starter cannot spin engine fast enough
That's the best I can offer.
You saying it puts it into our realm and raises its probably
With that old lawn tractor I collected I had a similar problem, my jump leads were faulty causing a voltage drop and it cranked too slowly. Once I fixed the jump leads it cranked much faster and started immediately.
Is your cable cross section from battery to starter and from chassis back to battery big enough? Good electrical contact at battery and starter?
Yes, soon I take pictures showing everything and we do voltage test on the starter to see how low voltage going when starter engaged
There seems to be a HUGE difference when starter is spinning engine without compression, then when it has compression, it comes to a screeching halt
My suspicion: new rings and pistons are making it hard for starter to spin engine fast enough to start it
Also, does the wiring have to be hooked up for the engine to run OR
long as it has diesel, and heated glow plug, and it spin with starter, it should start, it does NOT need that key/ignition/all that wiring to be properly put together
(please critique this statement, thank you)
Plan for today: diagnose the voltage when starter runs, show yall the voltage numbers, take off body panels, get entire tractor ready for paint while diagnosing the no start
Paint plan: take off seat and all orange parts, hit with compressed air, diesel, wire wheels, part cleaner, then compressed air again (in that order)
Get entire frame exposed and cleaned
Also, clear table area, make an area to paint many parts, close to tractor so you can hit it all in one shot
Up close tractor body
There are 3 different paints in this image on tractor frame
14 volts, ok now: get a voltage reading while starter engaged
Voltage reading with no compression and starter running
Up close exhaust ports, diesel coming out since it is not igniting, this is normal
Got it to run, panicked, shut it down
Yes, you just witnessed it's first startup
Filled it up with oil all the way on dip stick
Tried again
Didn't work, all that added oil cooled the system, and it likes a full throttle , I try again now
I think it is the power situation, it cranked way better earlier when that battery was stronger
And 6 gauge wires coming from truck not strong enough to give it the big power demand
ok yes I come up with idea: get 2 or 3 good batteries hooked up in parallel close to tractor, run 6 gauge wires to truck battery and charge them for multiple hours/overnight
That way, I can have bigger reserve for when doing experimentation
@Russell King
I want to run it for 5-10 minutes in its current state, that shouldn't overheat it, or maybe run it for 1 minute
Shut down: throttle down and how I show in this picture, push lever up
Started again
The trick: let glow plugs stay connected with power for up to 2-3 minutes before and during cranking
youtu.be
Another start longer period
youtu.be
Runaway feeling
Someone explain what you just witnessed in this clip
I heated glow plugs for 2 minutes before the clip and throttle was FULL while cranking on it, then you saw what happened. You can see me panicking trying to shut it down, nothing was working, I even took off thinking it was runaway.
My new plan, have big towel close by that I toss onto intake port and choke it.
Why didnt my method of shutting it down work until way later? Why did it look like it does not respond to the throttle? Or is it because:
Since I crank on it with full throttle, it is DUMPING diesel into chamber, then once it start, it consume all that big amount of diesel and doesnt care about what the throttle is telling it
I am nervous about starting it, I want to get into cleaning/painting/non dangerous tasks while I let it marinate
Taking off seat, fenders
Can't take off steering wheel, can't take off fuel tank cover
Got steering wheel nut off, sprayed diesel, hit with torch, I don't know how it come out
Up close, nut removed, somehow use clamps and such to pull steering wheel up