HOME  DISCUSSIONS  PHOTOS  REVIEWS  CLASSIFIEDS  DEALERS  STORE
 

Go Back   TractorByNet.com > Brand Specific Forums > Power Trac
Show Recent Threads:
24 Hours
Since My Last Visit

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 06-27-2008, 09:02 PM   #1 (permalink)
Silver Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: SE, Michigan
Posts: 207
Default Technical Assistants

Ok,

I mentioned on another thread that my PT 422 Robin (#@@#&*^) was dying on me in mid-flight.

I would be going along, everything ok, and bam! The engine would just shut off!

Well, I found that the negative cable from the battery connected to the bottom of the engine was not tight. The bolt was very loose. I tightened it up, and walla, it started, and had no problems...............................until
mowing today.

Back to the same thing. I jiggled the negative cable (not easy to get to with the placement of the muffler, and everything hot) and it started up again.

Then died after about 5 minutes. Then same process, ran for approx. 15 minutes, died again.

No jiggling helps at this point.

I am going to let it cool off, undo the negative cable, clean it, put it back on to see if that will solve the problem.

In the mean time, has anyone else experienced a problem like this?

Does anyone have any other suggestions, or trouble shooting ideas?

I did use a digital meter to check, battery...A-ok.

I also went from the neg. connection at the eng. side and to some small (12-14 gauge) positive wires, and get 12.86 volts.

Wish I was better at trouble shooting, but not knowing what half of the parts are, and which wires are what, and what they do, well............I guess you could say that is the other half of the problem.

All feel free to jump in ;~)
ldabe is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 06-27-2008, 10:51 PM   #2 (permalink)
Veteran Member
 
BobRip's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Powhatan Va.
Posts: 2,348
Default Re: Technical Assistants

Just some thoughts on things I have seen:

Bad battery cable: Looked good, but prevents starting. Check to see if pulling the cable off the termial with the engine running gives you the same symptons. This may not be your problem. Replicate the problem.

Bad fuse holder: There were loose connections in the fuse holder that comes off of the starter. Do the lights still work when the engine dies? You should be able to trace back to the failure. If the lights go out, leave them on and the key on and start wiggling wires, connections, fuse holders, etc. Have somebody watch the lgihts as you wiggle. The component that makes the lights go on and off is probably bad.
I hope this helps. Keep feeding us data.
__________________
Bob Rip
Happiness is a garage full of tools and friends for you to help.
BobRip is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 06-27-2008, 10:52 PM   #3 (permalink)
Veteran Member
 
Wayne County Hose's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Wayne County Pa.
Posts: 1,489
Default Re: Technical Assistants

I have a 5 hp generator with the Robin engine. I used to have the same thing happen. I finally found the low oil sensor as the culprit. I disconnected it and it hasn't died since. Used to be the same thing you describe. Engine would be running, 30 minutes maybe, and shut off. What the? Go over, check the on/off switch, it's on, gas is good, pull the cord, and fire right up. Might run for 2 hours next time, then just shut off. Hope this helps, I know it's not as large an engine, but maybe the same sensor?

The negative cable should have nothing to do with the engine dying. You should be able to disconnect the cable with the engine running and the engine shouldn't die.
__________________
Knowing is not enough, you must apply.
Willing is not enough, you must do.
Bruce Lee
Wayne County Hose is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 06-27-2008, 10:59 PM   #4 (permalink)
Veteran Member
 
BobRip's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Powhatan Va.
Posts: 2,348
Default Re: Technical Assistants

Quote:
Originally Posted by Wayne County Hose
I have a 5 hp generator with the Robin engine. I used to have the same thing happen. I finally found the low oil sensor as the culprit. I disconnected it and it hasn't died since. Used to be the same thing you describe. Engine would be running, 30 minutes maybe, and shut off. What the? Go over, check the on/off switch, it's on, gas is good, pull the cord, and fire right up. Might run for 2 hours next time, then just shut off. Hope this helps, I know it's not as large an engine, but maybe the same sensor?

The negative cable should have nothing to do with the engine dying. You should be able to disconnect the cable with the engine running and the engine shouldn't die.
On my PT the oil pressure switch is not connected. I suspect it's that way on all of them. They connect them on generators because they operate unattended for many hours at a time.

You are probably right about disconnecting the negative cable. Give it a try Idabe.
__________________
Bob Rip
Happiness is a garage full of tools and friends for you to help.
BobRip is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 06-27-2008, 11:06 PM   #5 (permalink)
Veteran Member
 
Wayne County Hose's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Wayne County Pa.
Posts: 1,489
Default Re: Technical Assistants

I have done a ton of electronic troubleshooting on equipment, and I can tell you that intermittent problems like yours are the absolute worst. It used to drive me nuts. "If this blasted thing would just die, I could fix it." By the time you start troubleshooting, it runs again. Enough to make a preacher swear.

I like Bob's idea. This does sound like it could be a bad connection.

Well, if it died completely, you are in luck. Now, it can be fixed. Do you have an electrical schematic that you can post? I can tell you what to check and where.
__________________
Knowing is not enough, you must apply.
Willing is not enough, you must do.
Bruce Lee
Wayne County Hose is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 06-27-2008, 11:27 PM   #6 (permalink)
Veteran Member
 
BobRip's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Powhatan Va.
Posts: 2,348
Default Re: Technical Assistants

Quote:
Originally Posted by Wayne County Hose
I have done a ton of electronic troubleshooting on equipment, and I can tell you that intermittent problems like yours are the absolute worst. It used to drive me nuts. "If this blasted thing would just die, I could fix it." By the time you start troubleshooting, it runs again. Enough to make a preacher swear.

I like Bob's idea. This does sound like it could be a bad connection.

Well, if it died completely, you are in luck. Now, it can be fixed. Do you have an electrical schematic that you can post? I can tell you what to check and where.
Me too on tons of troubleshooting. You could also hook up a beeper and listen to is as you wiggle things. Parallel the beeper with the lights or the fuel solenoid.
__________________
Bob Rip
Happiness is a garage full of tools and friends for you to help.
BobRip is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 06-28-2008, 01:59 AM   #7 (permalink)
Veteran Member
 
woodlandfarms's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Los Angeles / SW Washington
Posts: 1,429
Default Re: Technical Assistants

Electrical is bad, but for me ground electrical issues are the worst. Make sure where the cable is connecting that it is clean and dry and free of paint First, more than likely you have been arking there so no there is carbon buildup. Second, everything gets painted before wiring so generally the ground points have paint on them

I am going to be running a big grounding strap from my engine to my front and back chasis. Just to make sure that I never have grounding issues...
__________________
Power-Trac 1850, grapple, hoe, 90" mower, 72" box blade
woodlandfarms is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 06-28-2008, 09:59 AM   #8 (permalink)
Silver Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: SE, Michigan
Posts: 207
Default Re: Technical Assistants

BobRip,
I have been unable to start it since it last died, but I will try removing the neg. cable when I ever do get it started.
The lights did not work this last time when the eng. died. But before this last time, the oil cooling fan would come on sometimes. This last time it died, I went to lift the hood and before I did the fan came on, so I tried to start (like other times) but no start, and now the fan doesn't come on either.

WCH,
I don't know if I have a sensor. I will try and find out. But your description of what was happening to your Gen. is a lot like what I was experiancing with the PT. (Btw, I am a preacher, and the old familar words did come to mind, but so far, thank God, have not come out of the mouth.)
I will try to dig out the schematic and post it.

Woodlandfarms,
I cleaned the neg. cable pretty good, but still nothing. What kind of "strap" are you going to be using (size, material)?

Thanks for all the suggestions, and please, keep them coming.
ldabe is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 06-28-2008, 10:41 AM   #9 (permalink)
Silver Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: West Cascades Washington State
Posts: 219
Default Re: Technical Assistants

If i understand right, sounds like nothing electrical is working. Try bye-passing the the switch by running from the battery directly. See if you can get the starter to spin that kind of stuff. When you turn the switch on do you hear a click from the the fuel shut-off solenoid?
cqaigy2 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 06-28-2008, 11:09 AM   #10 (permalink)
Bronze Member
 
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Missouri Ozarks.
Posts: 98
Default Re: Technical Assistants

Quote:
Originally Posted by Wayne County Hose
I have done a ton of electronic troubleshooting on equipment, and I can tell you that intermittent problems like yours are the absolute worst. It used to drive me nuts. "If this blasted thing would just die, I could fix it." By the time you start troubleshooting, it runs again. Enough to make a preacher swear.

I like Bob's idea. This does sound like it could be a bad connection.

Well, if it died completely, you are in luck. Now, it can be fixed. Do you have an electrical schematic that you can post? I can tell you what to check and where.

When I was working for a living I was a maintenance electrician, like you say, intermittent faults make one look like an idiot.
No idea what he's operating, but I had one like that on my ride on mower, turned out to be the seat safety switch "making" for some obscure reason, so just pulled the connector and no more problems.
John47 is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off
Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:05 AM.


HOME DISCUSSIONS PHOTOS REVIEWS CLASSIFIEDS DEALERS STORE
About TractorByNet.com | Terms of Service | Advertise | © 2008 TractorByNet.com