Darth'll give you the Hot Goss in the back of his van anytime.Why the hell do we let Canadians post here if they're not gonna give us the hot goss?
Darth'll give you the Hot Goss in the back of his van anytime.Why the hell do we let Canadians post here if they're not gonna give us the hot goss?
Year, make, model, and engine scooter.
Voltage regulator. Probably going. Intermittent low/high is a classic sign. And onerous to check/"catch" without gear that can place a load on it.I'm gonna write this much here as a placeholder if nothing else and see if I'm missing something. Probably won't get to spend a lot of time with it until tomorrow though.
So it started choking out yesterday due to low fuel pressure. Pump, alternator, and battery are all recent replacements (a year or less) and all check good under normal conditions.
While it was doing that, other shit started acting weird too, like the dash light for the airbags comes on, and my phone plugged in a known good charger says "charging slowly". As if everything, or at least a few seemingly unrelated things are trying to function at reduced power.
Blinkers seem to operate at normal speed.
Haven't had it out at night, in a dark enough place, while its happening, to see if the headlights seem dim or pulse.
Also things have to be fully hot for some time before it happens, then it starts happening progressively. At first only if it demands a lot of fuel, then at 2500 rpm, then 2k, then 15, etc. til you can't hardly get it rolling.
Shut it off for several minutes and it gets better again, though it gets worse much faster as it's starting from already warmed up.
Like something has to draw current, get hot and stay hot for a while before it messes up. And effects more than just the pump.
Things to do....
Run it til it's messing up good then while it's doing that check alternator output, power to fuel pump, cigarette lighter, and anything else that's acting funny.
Check power to and from inertia switch and/or bypass it temporarily.
Go through and make sure power and grounds are clean and tight.
Look for signs of heat or anything weird at main wiring plugs that would affect more than one thing, like pcm, back of fuse and relay boxes, etc.
Keep searching ford forums, etc. for someone with same problem and what caused it.
Cuss at it.
Beat it into submission.
Voltage regulators are built into alternator nowdays, not a separate part, but yeah gonna check that when it's fucking up good.Voltage regulator. Probably going. Intermittent low/high is a classic sign. And onerous to check/"catch" without gear that can place a load on it.
It's an independent, replaceable component. Come on, it's easy enough to go in/out of there. Fine, replace the whole thing.Voltage regulators are built into alternator nowdays, not a separate part, but yeah gonna check that when it's fucking up good.
Fine, maybe it is. Gotta troubleshoot some more before I just blindly replace shit anyway.It's an independent, replaceable component. Come on, it's easy enough to go in/out of there. Fine, replace the whole thing.
Just scrape it with a razor blade.The mice that live int he shed scratched away at the gasket for the rocker cover on the lawn tractor, at least I'm assuming that was it. Either way, the gasket ain't gasketing anymore and oil is very slowly seeping out.
So I ordered up new gaskets from MTD, along with new rocker covers just in case, it's all cheap parts, so fuck it.
My question is, once I get the rocker cover and old gasket off:
A) what should I use to clean the surface of the engine block/cylinder head, whatever the rocker cover attaches onto.
B) what, if anything, should I apply to the surfaces to make the gasket do its thing.
Link to said rocker cover.
Rocker Cover - KH-25-096-11-S | Cub Cadet US
Read reviews and buy Rocker CoverKH-25-096-11-S. Free shipping on parts orders over $45.www.cubcadet.com
It's due for its oil change anyway, so kinda good timing. Gotta drain it anyways. Change the fuel filter, air filter, oil filter, etc.