Flames!
Flames!
I'm not too familiar with the two cylinder John Deere engines. The other night, I started my 420C to get to the master link on the track. I noticed flames coming out of the muffler's exhaust. This got me to worrying about burning the valves. Is the timing off, or could the cause be valve adjustment being off? Or is this normal?
Life is too short to drink bad coffee!
420 Crawler
420 Crawler
- Willyr
- 2010 crawler
- Posts: 695
- Joined: Sat Jul 17, 2010 3:03 am
- Location: Downeast Maine (North of Ellsworth)
If it is a straight stack and your doing it at dusk with little light, some dull flame is normal. That being said, if you have a bright flame (did you wind it over getting too much choke?) it may be burning off some extra fuel. No, bright flames are not normal.
former owner of a 1956 420c
All help is greatly appreciated.
Proud owner of a project 1952 JD 60
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nFehqXVd9z4
All help is greatly appreciated.
Proud owner of a project 1952 JD 60
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nFehqXVd9z4
- 440 iron popper
- 1010 crawler
- Posts: 273
- Joined: Sun Sep 26, 2010 7:48 pm
- Location: Québec, Canada
It happened to me last year. After a while pushing snow, I saw quite good flames coming out the pipe! Enough to shut it down. I searched for a cause... My alternator died. The battery discharged to around 8V. So the output of the ignition coil was lower, weaker spark. I guess unburned gas from bad combustion reached the hot stack and finished to burn there. I tought I created a 5 strokes engine... I fixed the charging issue. After that, no more flames.
440IC 1958 #443712, 602 blade, Gearmatic winch project in the back
440IC, serial tag gone, Blade with tilt
-------------------------------------------------------
440IC, serial tag gone, Blade with tilt
-------------------------------------------------------
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 8 guests