[Farmall] "H" running a little rough
Mike Sloane
mikesloane at verizon.net
Sun Mar 14 07:04:00 PDT 2010
I have been led to believe that the current formulation of WD-40 is not
as flammable as the previous one. Years ago, one of the best uses for
WE-40 was for chasing down intake exhaust leaks - you sprayed it on the
intake manifold, and when it got sucked into the engine through a leak,
the engine would speed up. But that doesn't seem to work these days.
And Charlie is right - I forgot to mention the spark plug wires in my
previous note - those old cracked high tension wire leak spark like an
old rubber garden hose. A good trick is to run the tractor on a dark
night - sometimes you will see an amazing light show all around the
ignition system. Also listen for the "snap, snap, snap" of a spark
jumping between two wires or from a wire to ground.
Mike
cvill wrote:
> Tim,
>
> Make absolutely sure the exhaust pipe is covered so it takes on no
> water. Beyond that your plug wires probably leak a little spark when
> damp. Wet them down with WD-40. Wet the cap and the head of the coil
> too if it has a coil. (distributor ignition) This should solve the
> problem for at least several months which will allow you to replace
> wiring whenever you get around to it, assuming that is the problem. It
> may be a good policy to let the WD-40 air dry for a day before starting
> the tractor. I have never had a fire problem from doing the WD-40, but
> we do not want your new H to turn into a candle.
>
> Charlie V.
>
>
> Tim Savelle wrote:
>> The guy I bought my 1949 "H" from kept it in a nice, enclosed shop with a
>> concrete floor. The day I checked it out, he hit the starter switch and it
>> fired up immediately....and then "purred like a kitten." I don't have a
>> nice, enclosed shop (yet), so my "H" has to stay outside for the time
>> being. We've had 3 or 4 days of rain and chilly, damp weather this past
>> week. The tractor is now a little difficult to start (doesn't "catch" as
>> quickly), and it runs a little rough until it warms up. Could having to
>> stay outside with constant exposure to the dampness cause this?
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