Repairs lawn boy 10415

Rivets

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Nozzle goes straight up the center of the carb. Probably red. You should be able to pull it out.
 

jrogers297

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I checked the nozzle, dismantled carb again, and mower wont start. It seems like its not getting spark, how do i check spark?
 

Fireman 123

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Take the spark plug out and attach it to the plug wire. There should be a visible arc, and a "snap" sound at the electrode of the plug when you pull the starter rope.
 

jrogers297

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I didn't get a spark or hear a pop. When testing for spark do I need to ground the plug? I was searching on the net to see if anybody else experienced this problem and i came across quite a few people with problems with the coil. The two things to be tried was using a hair dyer to heat up the coil and a similar idea is to "bake" your coil using an oven.? Is this a valid fix? Is this safe to do? Incidently i tried the hair dyer idea and it worked all be it was not the smoothest start. Does the fact that the hair dyer worked help me with the diagnosis and/or the permmanent repair needed?
 

Rudedog

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I didn't get a spark or hear a pop. When testing for spark do I need to ground the plug? I was searching on the net to see if anybody else experienced this problem and i came across quite a few people with problems with the coil. The two things to be tried was using a hair dyer to heat up the coil and a similar idea is to "bake" your coil using an oven.? Is this a valid fix? Is this safe to do? Incidently i tried the hair dyer idea and it worked all be it was not the smoothest start. Does the fact that the hair dyer worked help me with the diagnosis and/or the permmanent repair needed?

I know that they bake a coil from time to time on old chainsaws. Remove the coil and heat it up with a in the oven at 150 degrees for an hour or two. Then seal the unit with a "Conformal coating" or a very thin epoxy and reinstall it and set the air gap this will bring them back to life 50% of the time. This would be my last ditch effort before tossing it.
 

Rivets

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You must ground the plug. Baking the coil and/or using a hairdryer are garage mechanic stuff and you will not get a good results. Plus you can do more damage if not careful. Ground the plug with the kill wire off and if no spark replace the coil. Any mechanic worth a penny would test it this way.
 

Rudedog

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I agree with Rivets 100%. I was just answering the question if it was possible.
 
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