Greetings All
This one has a fellow mechanic and myself both stumped. Briggs engine on a Stiga articulated mower died last summer, dead coil. Replaced with Stens # 440-433 which lasted 5 minutes and died. Ordered and installed a Briggs # 492341 coil which lasted about 10 hours, so figured there was something back feeding into the coil and killing it. Ordered another new coil which was subbed up to Briggs # 591495.
Took the flywheel off and checked everything under the flywheel and around the engine. Installed a diode into stop wire to eliminate any back feeding from the tractor's electrical system. Reassembled the unit which ran for about 5 hours, then the flywheel key sheared and the timing went right out the window. Replaced flywheel key and torqued bolt to spec. Unit ran for about 10 hours and died, no spark, another dead coil. Ordered new coil, back ordered for 3 months, by which time the machine had been put into winter storage.
Finally got back to the unit this week after bringing it out of winter storage. Installed the new coil, engine now runs but won't rev up and exhaust pipe glows red hot. The only time I've ever seen this before was on a Tecumseh riding mower engine where the crankshaft had slipped in the flywheel retarding the ignition about 20º. Here's where my mind starts running. Last year, I had a B&S Vanguard V-twin come in with one dead coil. A single coil was not available, so a pair of coils had to be ordered which came with a stepped flywheel key to advance the flywheel on the crankshaft. Has there been a service bulletin from Briggs regarding these new coils and possibly a stepped flywheel key to correct the timing. Thanks in advance,
Sky
Engine Information
Make: Briggs & Stratton
Model: 282H07
Type: 0113-E1
Code: 0407287C (might be ZC)