I bought a 48 Ford 8n a little over a month ago. It started the first week I owned it but not easily. After the first week I had it the starter burned up and the flywheel teeth broke. I have since replaced both and have the tractor back together enough to try starting it. When I bought the tractor I was told it was converted to 12 volt but it still retained a generator. I decided to buy a 6 volt battery and rewire the whole tractor at the same time since all the wires were badly corroded and I followed the 6 volt wiring diagram in the shop manual. I have also replaced the coil, spark plugs, plug wires, voltage regulator, points, condenser, igniton switch .I am now thinking that fuel is my problem because when I remove the hose that goes to the air cleaner fuel runs out. What I am most concerned about though is when I bought it I checked engine compression and I had 90 lbs on all cylinders now I checked it again and have only 75 lbs on all cylinders. Is 75 enough to run the tractor? Is my drop just due to the slower cranking of the 6 volts? The last the tractor ran it backfired badly is it possible it broke a timing gear? Any help or suggestions will be greatly appreciated.
I doubt you could have lost compression from 90psi to 75ps in a month. How did you check the compression to get 90 psi? Was the engine at operating temperature? Did you check the compression the same way when you got 75 psi?
You're kind of bouncing all over checking this and checking that. Start with checking the spark. Using an old spark plug, gap it to 3/16" to 1/4", stick it into the boot and hold it against a good ground , turn on the key and try a start. You should have a FAT, BLUISH-WHITE SPARK, THE COLOR OF LIGHTNING. If you don't have that, you gotta' find out why. worn, misdjusted, burned or corroded points, 12V coil on a 6V system, burned out 6v coil on a 12v system, bad condensor, etc. Something in your primary igntion circuit isn't right. if you havve the requisite spark,next check the timing and the firing order to make sure they are correct. If ythey are correct, move to the fuel system. open the tank valve and take the plug out of the bottomof the carb,holding a suitable container underneath it to catch the gas. The gas should come out in a CONTINUOUS FLOW not dribbling or intermittnet. If it doen't you've got an obstruction in the fuel delivery. Check the screen in the carb elbow and the filter in the sediment bowl. Check the tank vent for obstructions.
you said the electrical system was changed to 12 V with a generator. Is the genrator in fact 12V? Was the coil changed to 12V or was a resisitor put into the primary circuit with a 6v coil to limit the primary current? If that resistor isn''t there, then the coil could be damaged.
Conduct these checks in the orer that I've given you one at a time. If you find a problem, fix it and see if the tractor starts. if not move on to the next step. If you do this systematically, you find the cause of the problem.