Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > can't pull rope
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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mtbmike
Joined: Jan 20, 2009
Points: 35
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can't pull rope
Original Message Feb 8, 2014 4:27 pm |
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my simplicity pro was running great last week, and now won't start. i cannot pull the starter rope unless i remove the spark plug. i took apart the carb bowl, removed the float and needle and sprayed with carb cleaner, re-assembled, no better. i squirted some gas in the cylinder, replaced the plug, no difference. it has electric start, i have popped the GFCI several times at the outlet. not sure what to do next!
This message was modified Feb 17, 2014 by a moderator
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RedOctobyr
Location: Lowell area, MA
Joined: Nov 5, 2011
Points: 282
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Re: can't pull rope (TOP TOPIC)
Reply #6 Feb 9, 2014 11:15 am |
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Shryp, if it were oil causing an issue on the downstroke, I'd expect the oil might try to blow out of the crankcase breather as the piston went down and you pressurized the crankcase? Just wondering.
But I would, for instance, sniff the dipstick and/or the oil fill tube, to see if you smell gas. It's possible that gas is leaking into the crankcase (from something like a stuck float/needle valve in the carb), filling the crankcase. Is the oil level correct? If it has more "oil" (possibly also gas) than it did last time, you likely had gas leaking into the crankcase.
If you remove the plug, and pull the cord fast a few times, does anything spray out of the sparkplug hole? Like Shryp said, if you have a cylinder filled with gas/oil, you would be unable to pull the cord with the plug installed. But you might see some come out if you spin the engine over quickly with the plug out.
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RedOctobyr
Location: Lowell area, MA
Joined: Nov 5, 2011
Points: 282
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Re: can't pull rope (TOP TOPIC)
Reply #8 Feb 9, 2014 2:28 pm |
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If you're under the valve cover, and there's a long straight rod, that sounds like it could be a pushrod.
I haven't worked on a Briggs OHV snowblower engine, just a Briggs OHV tractor engine. But on that, and my Tecumseh OHV snowblower engine, the pushrods were trapped under the rocker arms, and shouldn't just be moving around freely.
I'm trying to think of a reason why it wouldn't turn over without the plug removed, but also had a pushrod loose. Is the rod straight and undamaged?
If the pushrod in question is the one for the valve that provides the compression release (maybe exhaust?), I guess that could make sense. You'd have no compression release at all, so you'd be trying to push the piston up into a fully-sealed chamber, which would be much harder. I don't know *how* hard, though, whether it would be so bad that you couldn't turn it over with the pull-starter.
Do the rocker arms (the pivots between the pushrods and the valves) look OK?
Sounds like pictures might help.
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