Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > 11 hp briggs engine does not want to run, floods
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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Underdog
Joined: Oct 18, 2008
Points: 332
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Re: 11 hp briggs engine does not want to run, floods
Reply #33 Sep 19, 2009 9:51 pm |
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I appreciate the suggestions on what to check. I took the carb apart again. I found the "welch plug" that I have heard about on these briggs engines. I probed and poked with the wire from a twist tie in all the holes again. I sprayed carb cleaner into the holes and then blew them out with compressed air. I was wondering if I should be able to get the carb cleaner to come squirting out that small pair of holes. And if so, where I should squirt or blow in. I'll put it together tomorrow. If everything goes like it did on Friday, I'll hook it all up, pull the starter cord a few times with the choke on, the fuel will fill the bowl and the motor will spring to life, run for 2 minutes and die suddenly. Then it won't start again no matter what I try. So, we'll see how accurate my prediction is. I will try to take a video. The engine just dies, it it not under load and not idling, just running normal. Last time it stopped, it just stopped like the kill switch had been flipped. The engine has a red "kill switch" on the side. Or at least I think that is what it is. The strange thing about the kill switch is that it has picture of an oil can or a gas can next to the switch. This is a kill switch right? Please tell me its a kill switch, it say "on" and "off" and its red. No idea why they would put a gas can on the switch. The carb is starting to look really clean. I'll post a picture of the needle. Can I replace the seat that the needle fits into?
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Underdog
Joined: Oct 18, 2008
Points: 332
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Re: 11 hp briggs engine does not want to run, floods
Reply #40 Sep 20, 2009 10:18 pm |
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<BR> No, no problem taking the oil alert out, it will run fine...<BR><BR>Leave the switch hooked up, just take the spade lug off that runs down to the oil float assy.<BR><BR>Did your kill switch work before?<BR> <BR>I never had a chance to use the kill switch. The engine always died on its own before I could try it. The prevous owner used the throttle lever to kill the engine when he demo'd it for me. The trottle I think has ground on it. At least it looks like a ground. There are wires that go down to the throttle linkage. I have not figured out why those wires go down there. There are places for them to be attached. On some of these leaf loaders they add safety switches that prevent the engine (and impeller) from running when there's nothing attached to the vac's input collar. So I should reasemble everything including the switch but this time not attach the red wire that runs to that oil sensing plug. If that red light on the switch was coming on when the engine was cutting out, I doubt I would have seen it. It is ussually broad daylight out when I run it. It makes one heck of a loud sound when that impeller gets spinning. I would wake up the whole neighborhood if I ran it at night. The suction is amazing.
This message was modified Sep 20, 2009 by Underdog
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