Francis wrote:I’m taking advantage of your offer to help. Thank you. This doesn’t have to work again till spring - so no rush. I think I have what I need to run the compression test, crankcase leak test, and spark strength test but I have a few questions.
What is special about a two cycle compression tester?
they have a shorter hose length so they do not lose accuracy (remember these are a small volume of air, and air can compress in the hose before it reaches gauge)
Is this compression measurement procedure correct?
Turn off the ignition switch
Open the throttle and choke
Screw the compression fitting into the spark plug hole and attach the gauge
Pull the starter cord until the pressure reading is constant.
correct. Most 2-strokes will need a minimum of 100 PSI to operate well - 130 - 160 psi would be a generic operating range
Crankcase leak detection:
Seal air inlet and muffler outlet. I need to make a hand pump adapter to attach the pressure hose.
Pressurize 5-10psi - probably 5 psi to not blow seals. Wait 5 min. I’m thinking a loss of 1psi is acceptable.
What do you advise for max pressure and % loss?
Stihl's are similar to Echo's - crankcase pressure test should hold 7 PSI for 1 minute, and should hold 14 in. Hg (14 inches) for 1 minute (also, if that test passes, try shifting crankshaft in and out against bearings - end play may uncover bad spots) Reason being - if they cant hold pressure or vacuum, they can't properly operate the fuel pump (via impulse port) of the carburetor.
Spark strength:
I have an in-line tester that has an adjustable air gap. If the spark will jump a 1/4” gap, it should be forceful enough. Do you agree and/or do you have a different method.
Thanks for your help. Enjoy your weekend!
yes should be able to jump a 1/4 inch gap (with spark plug installed) on an inline tester - may even go as far as 10mm (each mm of gap represents approximately 1 Kv of firing voltage.. spark plug under compression will typically add another 10Kv or so)
Lastly - using the very same pressure/vacuum tester as for the crankcase test, with machine all together, fish out the fuel filter and remove filter (plan on replacing it anyway even if it looks clean.. they do plug up internally) remove filter and attach pressure pump to the fuel line - should be able to pump up and hold 6 - 7 PSI for 1 minute (pop off on a wet test may go as high as 13-14 PSI) if not, metering needle is leaking (maybe deformed diaphragm, or metering lever height wrong, etc), or you may have a pinhole or crack in a fuel line, leaking carburetor diaphragm or gasket, among other possibilities.. If there is a primmer/purge bulb in the system , then you can press the bulb once and release which should cause pressure to drop a bit and then hold steady (if it does, then no need to bother with a pop-off test, which in your case isnt needed anyway since you are getting fuel enough to run a bit) and then you can switch to vacuum side, and use the purge bulb to pull a vacuum and see if it holds vacuum.. (which should also test the purge system as well) and finally if all checks out, you'd put fuel line back in with new filter, and fuel cap, then unhook fuel line from carburetor and hook up tester, try to pull a vacuum (tank vent should prevent any vacuum from holding, though you might get the needle to move) , and then see if tank holds pressure (should be able to hold 2-3 PSI before pressure relief pops off - more than 3 PSI then you have a tank vent problem.. likewise if it holds any vacuum..)
Finally, check and verify the spark plug is the correct type and gap (If I recall it should be a CJ7Y or RCJ7Y champion or NGK BPMR6A or BPMR6Y.. or maybe a BMR6A or BM6A gapped at .025")
if all those check out fine, and you are certain you have clean, fresh gas with 50:1 mix (and not just any old cheapo "2 cycle oil", but modern blended oil meant for chainsaws & trimmers) then pretty much only thing remaining is either the carburetor, or possibly clogged exhaust port (remove muffler and check port for build-up and also check muffler itself for any clogging.. I've seen them plugged up by mud wasps / mud daubers and go through as many as 3 different shops or techs before coming to me with all kinds of expensive work done on them... and all I had to do was cleanout the mud... another possibility , though relatively unlikely would be a sheared flywheel key or bad ignition module (timing off or misfiring)
How poor are they who have not patience. What wound did ever heal, but by degrees? - Iago (Othello Act II, Scene 3)