warreng5995
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- Joined
- Jan 26, 2021
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- 22
Fully agree about the ethanol and the EPA garbage. I wish the carbs were adjustable again... what the stupid EPA has forced to be done to them is as stupid as the new "no spill" fuel cans... along with many other things.In my experience this is due to coating of the jets.
The EPA has made all engine builders lean out their engines. This started this about 1988. They have gotten progressively leaner in stages, which is why many motorcycles now have fuel injection. If they have their way, look for electronic fuel injection on mowers in the next 10 years, or all-electric mowers mandated by law.
When everything is "perfect" your engine is running on a very minimal amount of fuel. Should anything happen to the float level or the jet size, then there won't be enough fuel to start a hot engine without using the choke.
Enter ethanol loaded fuels. When these are left in the carb for any length of time, the alcohol attracts water. The alcohol and water mixture leaves a very thin layer of (usually dark brown) "varnish" on everything.... including the inside of the jets. This makes the jet smaller on its fuel metering orifice... which in turn further leans out the fuel mixture. It's not much, but it's enough. The engine seems to run correctly, but it's really starved for fuel. Thus, the only way a hot engine will start is by using the choke.
Since the engine seems to run OK, I wouldn't open the carb. In your shoes I'd start using a "fuel stabilizer" AND carb cleaner, such as StarTron. The stabilizer will work to prevent future problems by keeping the alcohol in solution with the gasoline, and the cleaner will work to clean out any varnish that has accumulated. And it will do this while you run the engine on your regular schedule.
I implement this plan in my shop by treating the fuel in the BIG cans as soon as I bring it home from the gettin' place. In this way the StarTron works its way into my chain saw, leaf blower, weed whacker, my Exmark and both my walk-behinds. And the plan works. None of my equipment ever has carb or fuel issues.
Hope this helps.
As far as ethanol goes, I don't buy ethanol fuel just for some of the reasons you listed. My local gas station is also a truck stop and they sell premium non-ethanol gasoline. Back about 5 years ago when I did buy ethanol, and even though I put some type of stabilizer in it, I kept having issues with my trimmers and chainsaw carbs, even a carb on a very small genset. Clean and rebuilt them, last for a while same issues. Bought new carbs, after a while, same issues. Switched to non-ethanol, haven't had any more problems.
I do use fuel stabilizer in anything engine that doesn't get used often or is going to be sitting more than a couple weeks. Also used it in the storage can if the fuel isn't going to be used directly. Haven't heard of startron before. But I do not like "stabil", its garbage in my opinion. I found a stabilizer called PRI-G for gasoline and PRI-D for diesel. Have used both for several years and it works well. From what I remember reading several years ago, its the same company that makes fuel stabilizer used in most ships.
In any case, like I said in my op, just got done with this full engine rebuild, full carb rebuild including all new jets, float, etc. I haven't ran the engine probably 1 hour in total since rebuild. All fresh fuel, clean tank, all new filters, new fuel pump, new fuel lines, new plug, etc.
Also the first time it wouldn't restart when hot (the first real time running it after rebuild), my Dad had tried it out for about 20 min cutting and shut it down when the UPS guy showed up. When it wouldn't restart I also thought it wasn't getting fuel, so I got some started fluid and shot it in the air intake, got nothing, not even a hit. Just like all the other times since when hot. So at that point I thought maybe the needle valve got stuck or something and might have flooded while he was talking to the UPS guy, towed it back up to the shop pulled plug, little glaze on the plug. cranked over engine, mist shot out of cylinder, but nothing out of the ordinary. So thats when I started trying to figure out what was going on before I ever posted here. Which at that time I thought it was related to the oil in the vacuum line going to the fuel pump, but have since ruled that out as a non-issue.
With that said, I could be wrong, but I really think its a weak coil at this point. When I get some time, I'm going to take the coil out and go buy a new B&S one from my local Stihl dealer. So we'll see what that does. I don't like throwing parts at an engine and see what sticks, but after everything else I've already rebuilt and replaced on this thing, might as well replace the coil too.