Goose
Well-known Member
I’m trying t get a H Farmall running that hasn’t run for a couple of years.
It always ran OK, and then a couple of years ago I wanted to move it so I could mow where it was sitting. It started up, ran for about 5 seconds and stopped. Then wouldn’t start again. I walked away from it at the time. Due to other projects and health issues I’m just now getting back to it.
A week or so ago, I charged the battery and tried to start it. No go. I checked the ignition with a small timing light and I had fire at the spark plugs. I checked the carburetor and there was no gas in it. I pulled the sediment bowl, and there was no screen in it. I opened the valve on the sediment bown and nothing came out. I siphoned the gas out of the tank and removed the sediment bowl. It was plugged with some dirt.
I let the tank dry out inside and blew a bit of crud out of it with an air hose. I then installed a new sediment bowl and checked the inline screen at the carb. Good fuel flow to the carb. Tried starting it and it fired right up and ran for about 10 seconds and quit. Wouldn’t restart. I checked for fire at the spark plugs and there was none. I swiped the breaker points with sandpaper to make sure there was no corrosion preventing good contact. Still no fire. The breaker points, condenser, spark plugs, and plug wires were all new several years ago. It probably hasn’t run ten hours on them. I installed a known good coil, and still no fire at the plugs. A test light shows 6 volts at the post on the distributor when the ignition switch is on.
That’s where I am now. After I came to the house this evening, it occurred to me I should have tried a different wire from the coil to the distributor cap. Maybe I’ll do that next.
Would a condenser that new act up and fail within a few hours? Anything is possible with electronics.
I’m open to suggestions. That’s about as simple as an ignition system as there is, and I’m stumped.
It always ran OK, and then a couple of years ago I wanted to move it so I could mow where it was sitting. It started up, ran for about 5 seconds and stopped. Then wouldn’t start again. I walked away from it at the time. Due to other projects and health issues I’m just now getting back to it.
A week or so ago, I charged the battery and tried to start it. No go. I checked the ignition with a small timing light and I had fire at the spark plugs. I checked the carburetor and there was no gas in it. I pulled the sediment bowl, and there was no screen in it. I opened the valve on the sediment bown and nothing came out. I siphoned the gas out of the tank and removed the sediment bowl. It was plugged with some dirt.
I let the tank dry out inside and blew a bit of crud out of it with an air hose. I then installed a new sediment bowl and checked the inline screen at the carb. Good fuel flow to the carb. Tried starting it and it fired right up and ran for about 10 seconds and quit. Wouldn’t restart. I checked for fire at the spark plugs and there was none. I swiped the breaker points with sandpaper to make sure there was no corrosion preventing good contact. Still no fire. The breaker points, condenser, spark plugs, and plug wires were all new several years ago. It probably hasn’t run ten hours on them. I installed a known good coil, and still no fire at the plugs. A test light shows 6 volts at the post on the distributor when the ignition switch is on.
That’s where I am now. After I came to the house this evening, it occurred to me I should have tried a different wire from the coil to the distributor cap. Maybe I’ll do that next.
Would a condenser that new act up and fail within a few hours? Anything is possible with electronics.
I’m open to suggestions. That’s about as simple as an ignition system as there is, and I’m stumped.