rbargeron
Well-known member
Lifetime Member
Equipment
L5450, L48, L3250, L345 never enough attachments
I use my my L5450 with 90" finish mower to cut about 10 acres of gently-sloped field grass around my place. I run it at about 1800 rpm on the 750 pto speed. The engine (49 hp) has always had way more power than needed.
But a couple seasons back it developed a symptom where after a couple hours it will starts losing rpm, about 200 rpm (to 1600 or sometimes lower). I just kept going and didn't mind going a bit slower. Other tasks like snow blowing don't show the slow-down.
The main 7-acre grass parcel is sloped around 15 feet in its length of 400-500 ft. The fuel starvation thing is more noticeable when headed up-slope. If clutched, it recovers and then will resume normal rpm . At the end of a row, turning up-slope can bring the rpm drop too.
I've tried several things - most recently with new fuel in a new can atop the hood (eliminating the tank & filter) - no change.
I've never tinkered with the governor springs at the diesel pump. Anybody had experience? Other ideas?
Take care, Dick B
But a couple seasons back it developed a symptom where after a couple hours it will starts losing rpm, about 200 rpm (to 1600 or sometimes lower). I just kept going and didn't mind going a bit slower. Other tasks like snow blowing don't show the slow-down.
The main 7-acre grass parcel is sloped around 15 feet in its length of 400-500 ft. The fuel starvation thing is more noticeable when headed up-slope. If clutched, it recovers and then will resume normal rpm . At the end of a row, turning up-slope can bring the rpm drop too.
I've tried several things - most recently with new fuel in a new can atop the hood (eliminating the tank & filter) - no change.
I've never tinkered with the governor springs at the diesel pump. Anybody had experience? Other ideas?
Take care, Dick B
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