Hello everyone. I’m new to orangetractortalks. I have a 1981 B7100 hst. We’ve had a cold snap here in the northeast so along with using anti gel additive I’ve been starting my tractor once a day to maintain the battery ect. This morning I went to start it (it was about ten below) and I found the fuel filter had gelled up. I changed it and bled it but it’s only wanted to run for about 45 seconds at a time. Earlier I had bled it at the injector pump to make sure I had fuel there and I did but it would still only run for about 45 seconds. Just checked a little while ago and tried to bleed it again and there was no fuel from the bleed screw at the injector pump. Is there a chance that the fuel pump has gelled up also? If so is there anything I should know about taking it off? It looks pretty straight forward. I’ve already out diesel 911 in it and it won’t even start for the 45 seconds now. Any help would be greatly appreciated!
Drain the fuel completely and save it for the summer. Go to a large truck stop and buy your diesel there. Diesel blends change with the seasons and having summer diesel in your tractor in the winter will end up with the problems you now have and once the problem starts the mechanic in a can may not get to where you need it if the engine is not running.
Your B7100 has a dynamo to charge the battery. It is just marginal to do that so starting your tractor thinking you are helping the battery is a mistake.
With a good battery, it should be able to sit two months or more and still start the tractor in cold weather.
The entire system gel's. There is a screen type filter inside the fuel tank which also gel's.
Getting it into somewhere warm and then, after it has sat overnight, draining everything is the only sure fire problem solver. Then add your new truck stop diesel and run the engine until you are certain no old fuel remains.
Some owners have built tarp enclosures over their tractors in order to get everything warm.
Dave