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#1
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On Wed, 28 Mar 2012 09:19:19 -0700 (PDT), harry
wrote: On Mar 27, 1:45Â*am, "Steve B" wrote: I have a 21cc hedge trimmer. Â*A Craftsman. Â*It hasn't run for a while, but the guy swore it was running when put up. I put new gas in it, and checked the obvious. Â*It needed a new on/off switch. Â*It has spark. Â*I can't get it to pop, even with shooting a little gas into the carb, or on the sponge air cleaner. When I pull the start rope, there isn't very much "POP" at all. Â*I mean resistance that would come from good compression, or from firing and igniting the gas/air mixture. Just how much "POP" should be present, even if you have the switch off, and aren't trying to start it, but just basically see how much compression it has? Â*I call "POP" that instantaneous resistance on the pull rope where it would hit TDC, or fire with a spark. Â*Does two strokes not have the "POP" that four strokes have because of their different configuration? Tomorrow, I'll pull the carb and see if there's anything obvious there. Â*The primer bulb worked, no leakage, and filled up, presumably feeding gas to the carb. Steve The thing you thinkis a carb may not be. A lot of these micro-motors have minature petrol injection. It works by means of a diaphragm pwered by crank case compression. The advantage is, it works any way up. The diaphragm can split. the two tiny check valves can leak. Those are still carbs - not injectors. They are "regulator carbs" with a diaphragm instead of a float, and a pulse powered fuel pump (which has another diaphragm) |
#2
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![]() The thing you thinkis a carb may not be. A lot of these micro-motors have minature petrol injection. It works by means of a diaphragm pwered by crank case compression. The advantage is, it works any way up. The diaphragm can split. the two tiny check valves can leak. Those are still carbs - not injectors. They are "regulator carbs" with a diaphragm instead of a float, and a pulse powered fuel pump (which has another diaphragm) I have a vintage Honda FourTrax, the first year they were made. It wasn't ridden much, then restored by Grandpa for his kid at a cost of $900. Tires, and "stuff". Kid got busted for drugs, so Grandpa sold FourTrax. I picked it up. That early model has an electric fuel pump, as the carb is higher than the gas tank. It is a damn nightmare. I finally went to a friend who works on them, and asked what to do, as it was always acting up. He sold me a Mikuni pulse operated fuel pump. All you need is a vacant vacuum port on the carb, and the pulsation works a small diaphragm. Marvelous concept, except for the small detail of no port on that Honda. So, anyway, I got the electric one working. Hope it doesn't act up out in the bush. Sold the Mikuni to a friend who has a race bike, and he installed it on his, and it fixed his fuel starvation caused fluttering. The thing is elegantly simple. Three little nipples... vacuum, gas in, gas out. Bolt it on anywhere. Steve |
#3
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On Apr 2, 5:49*pm, "Steve B" wrote:
I have a vintage Honda FourTrax, the first year they were made. *It wasn't ridden much, then restored by Grandpa for his kid at a cost of $900. *Tires, and "stuff". *Kid got busted for drugs, so Grandpa sold FourTrax. *I picked it up. That early model has an electric fuel pump, as the carb is higher than the gas tank. *It is a damn nightmare. *I finally went to a friend who works on them, and asked what to do, as it was always acting up. He sold me a Mikuni pulse operated fuel pump. *All you need is a vacant vacuum port on the carb, and the pulsation works a small diaphragm. Marvelous concept, except for the small detail of no port on that Honda. So, anyway, I got the electric one working. *Hope it doesn't act up out in the bush. Sold the Mikuni to a friend who has a race bike, and he installed it on his, and it fixed his fuel starvation caused fluttering. The thing is elegantly simple. *Three little nipples... vacuum, gas in, gas out. *Bolt it on anywhere. Steve Those type fuel pumps are very common on many models of ATV's, Riding mowers and others. Hank |
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