The problem partially was the design of the flywheel and crankshaft keyway. It leads to the key being sheared easily which is why Briggs went to a steel key and the new torque amount.
And yes check the flywheel for a cracks. Here is just an example of what one customer here had happen to his 310000 series and this happen with an aluminum key when the flywheel was torqued to 100 ft/lbs. I would have thought it possible with the aluminum key but here is proof that it can happen. Now of course he also had a blown head gasket. The picture is after it been sitting in my scape pile for a year.
View attachment 56838
StarTech
I thought I would post some pic's so everyone could kinda see what I see. My camera sucks but it should help.
I'm not posting the pics to prove anything, just trying to help with info. I know just how hard it is to diagnose anything from words and lack of info/pics.
I've done nothing yet except inspect the the flywheel again. As you can kinda see from the pics, the mating tapers are shiny and some what polished except for scaring.
If the general opinion is to lap the two surfaces, I'm happy to do so. Happen to have some lapping paste.
I know its hard to tell from the pics, but unless there's a hair line crack, I can't find any cracks.
I'm not say there are none, I just can't see any. When I spray cleaning fluid in the tapered hole I hoped to see a tiny line show up from the crack picking up the fluid but no.
"Lawn Addict" Suggested magnaflux, but I'm not sure where I would take it for that.
"Lawn Royalty" Suggested lapping of Crank/Flywheel which I can do if more friction is needed.
Looks like the general consensuses is a cracked Flywheel or lack of friction to help the key-way do it's job and the backfiring is due to key-way shearing immediately.
My next move is to lap the flywheel/crank, buy several new key-ways and try again. The only loss is time and $2.25 key-way.
I Check this post between breaks, so looking for any other thought's.
Thank you very much Guys! Y'all have kept me from letting this sit for a year out of frustration.