Forum › Forums › Tractor Troubleshooting › Y385T Engine died abruptly
- This topic has 35 replies, 6 voices, and was last updated 11 years, 4 months ago by ironhorsemike.
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July 25, 2013 at 5:45 pm #30796
Rotary tilled 100' row, then PTO off, while turning around, engine stopped with no warning, or misfiring, just abruptly but not seized. Turned over when tried to restart, black smoke, some white smoke, no firing.
Tried an hour later, black smoke, fired a couple times but no start.
Next morning, cleaned screen in sediment bowl, pushed priming pump, with each stroke it squirted fuel from the return line back into the tank.
Several attempts to start produced some more black smoked and some random firing but did not start.
I would be grateful for some advice on what I might try or look for next. Thanks.
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July 25, 2013 at 9:30 pm #36225
Just guessing Mike, but it sounds like maybe your injector pump jumped out of time. I don't know if it uses a rectangular drive tang like a hydraulic pump or not, but if so, it may have gotten rounded off and slipped, screwing up the timing.
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July 26, 2013 at 6:47 pm #36226
Thanks for your input, Rich. It sounds as good anything I suspected, although I have no experience with injector pumps.
What do you think are the chances of the drive tang being rounded off on a 2004 tractor with less than 400 hours?
I've always been a pretty good amateur mechanic / fixer of many things, but a pump / injector job has me a bit intimidated. Time to call a professional, or??
Thanks for your help.
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July 26, 2013 at 10:44 pm #36227
I'm just guessing that is the cause – I could easily be wrong. Did you pull the injectors and look at the spray pattern on each of them? The fuel returning to the tank is from the lift pump, not the injector pump, I think. You should eliminate all easier, cheaper causes first, before you mess with the IP. Don't do heart surgery until you've ruled out indigestion, in other words,
Replacing the pump isn't difficult. Getting a new one installed so it is timed correctly can be a bigger challenge, but many have done it successfully. You have to carefully mark where the drive tang and gears are on the old one, don't remove anything you don't absolutely have to, and once it is re-installed you'll have to spill time it to be sure you have it right. You can look up spill timing on Google or wherever and see how it is done – not tricky, you just have to do it methodically and you'll get it right.
That said, if there is a qualified Jinma mechanic local to you I might use him. A mechanic who knows the tractor could probably do the R&R and timing in two hours or so, say $150-175 labor. If the local mechanic isn't familiar with your brand of tractor/engine, then you might as well do it yourself and learn the drill, as it will take him twice as long and he won't have the books or brand-specific experience. That's my take on it, at least. It's your call.
Before I did anything at all, I'd call Tommy at Affordable Tractor and get his input since he knows these machines inside and out and will be your parts source anyway.
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July 27, 2013 at 12:40 pm #36228
Have you checked your air cleaner it might not be getting enough air.
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July 28, 2013 at 3:23 am #36233
I have never seen a fuel injection pump with a tang drive. All the ones I've seen have either a gear keyed and bolted to the cam, the gear is bolted and keyed to a tapered cam, or the gear is slip-fitted and keyed against a shoulder on the cam. (The cam being the input shaft of the fuel injection pump, which is in itself a camshaft.) Even the adjustable advance and auto-advance devices are similar.
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July 30, 2013 at 6:24 pm #36245
Thanks David and Bob for your input. Yes, the air intake is one of the first things I checked and it's fine.
Rich, Tommy was away but I had a couple pleasant and informative chats with Harold at Affordable. He's very familiar with that engine.
Here's where I am as of today: pulled all three injectors, one at a time. Swiveled the pipes around and all three are now out away from the engine. When I crank the engine with the starter, all three puff out a little blast of finely divided mist, 1-2-3 in sequence. From what I read and see on-line, this is how it should behave. Of course, I cannot tell if they are timed right by just doing this.
Before I re-install the injectors into the block, can you think of anything else I might try while they are out? Again, it died suddenly while I was backing up the other day, and now only coughs to life for a short moment when trying to start.
I do appreciate any guidance and insights anyone may have and realize how difficult it can be to diagnose problems this way or over the phone. Thanks again.
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July 30, 2013 at 7:29 pm #36247
Bob I think perhaps Rich was talking about he other end of the pump shaft. Inside the pump. In that case many of them have a tang drive such as item 99 in the attached. The tang drive made it easy to field replace the pump. I recall a dimple on the shaft and one inside the pump so a person would really have to screw up to get it 180 out.
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July 30, 2013 at 7:31 pm #36248
ironhorsemike, make sure that you did not bump the compression release. Some of them can get a little tweaked and they don't return all the way. It's worth a look.
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July 31, 2013 at 1:50 pm #36252
That's a new one on me. I've never seen a tang drive governor either (other end of cam).
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August 1, 2013 at 6:27 pm #36263
Bob wrote “That's a new one on me. I've never seen a tang drive governor either (other end of cam). ”
All this means is that I have worked on every piece of crap that was ever built .
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August 1, 2013 at 7:28 pm #36264
“All this means is that I have worked on every piece of crap that was ever built . “
Hey, that's what we call valuable experiential wisdom! Or, in my case, a vast fund of generally useless information garnered through the perpetration of a long series of misadventures.
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August 1, 2013 at 9:18 pm #36266
Spring Valley wrote:
“All this means is that I have worked on every piece of crap that was ever built . “
Sometimes it feels exactly just like that.
Rich wrote:
“Hey, that's what we call valuable experiential wisdom! Or, in my case, a vast fund of generally useless information garnered through the perpetration of a long series of misadventures.“
I call it getting old and tired.
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August 2, 2013 at 9:44 am #36268
Thanks for all the entertaining banter, gentleman. It's fun to read and I'm feeling better as I think I'm closing in on the cause.
Yesterday, every time I tried to start it, no matter what the throttle position:
30 sec. glow
after 5 seconds of cranking, it sputters to life.
Tach jumps up to about 1,000 for a moment, then dies.
So I start thinking…governor. Talked to Tommy and Harold at Affordable and they steered me to the mushroom-shaped vent. Removed: it's bone dry. Put in 4oz. compressor oil.
Removed fuel / priming pump assembly. Barely any oil on floor of housing, but distressingly, some chewed up little metal pieces.
I heading to the farm right now to remove the 4-screw access plate on the housing behind the pump. Tommy told me to move a shaft in there back and forth as it might be stuck. Keeping my fingers crossed.
Spring Valley: Thanks for the exploded drawing of the pump. It looks a lot like mine, but not quite. Can you post another one? Not sure what to ask for, tho.
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August 2, 2013 at 1:05 pm #36269
Mike, that picture is of a Roosa Master injection pump. I don't know of anybody that has such a view of your pump. If you have a problem with it about all you can do is get a new one. The rebuild specs and internal parts are not available for the Chinese pumps that I have ever found. Good luck.
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August 2, 2013 at 2:27 pm #36270
I thought that was a CAV/Lucas pump. Oh well.
What he most has is the in-line Bosch or Diesel KIKI type.
Well, that's not the pic I wanted.
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August 2, 2013 at 2:32 pm #36271
Spring Valley is correct. Internal parts for these pumps are not available.
If you have metal pieces coming out of the drain hole, don't try to run the engine, those could be governor pieces and you would risk an overspeed condition. If on the other hand, the particles are more like grit or sand, flush the pump and governor thoroughly with diesel, blow out with compressed air and refill with fresh oil.
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August 3, 2013 at 2:00 pm #36272
The shaft in the left side (camshaft side), of the pump moved freely side to side, about one inch total. It is connected to the governor in the right-side housing and controls how big a shot the injectors get.
When the shaft is far left, it's full delivery; far right is complete injector shut-off.
So it's far left with engine off or being started, but in my case, it pulls clear to the right when the engine catches and starts up. Which immediately cuts off the fuel going to the injectors.
I held a screwdriver to prevent the shaft from moving all the way right, and the engine started up and kept running. If I held it all the way to the left, I would likely cause it to overspeed.
The metal pieces in the bottom of the left housing (camshaft), were thin and mangled. Tommy guessed they were shims used to calibrate the pump shots.
I'm about to remove the whole injector pump and see if I can fix whatever is wrong on the governor side. but my hopes of success are fading and have just about resigned myself to getting a new $500 pump. Not a huge deal, and Tommy and Harold deserve some business for all the free phone time they've spent with me. I just won't have the satisfaction of getting to the component-level root cause and fixing it myself.
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August 3, 2013 at 4:03 pm #36274
Don't even think you can fix it yourself unless you have a test bench to recalibrate it, and even then… Test benches start at around $20 large. And unless you have the proper training and understanding, don't even mess with the governor. Ego's have destroyed machines and killed people. Do you feel lucky?
There are no shims to “adjust pump shots”. The scroll and helix orientation is determined by the rack position, and the barrel and plunger assembly is controlled by the depth of the barrel in relation to the cam lift, which in effect establishes the fuel delivery quantity and timing for a particular cylinder. You can only set this accurately on a test bench.
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August 3, 2013 at 4:46 pm #36276
I completely agree with Bob. I ran a flow bench some years ago at a place where I worked. It takes training and knowledge of the pump you are working with. Without any specs or known settings there is nothing even a trained person can do with it and this is no place to take a shot in the dark and hope you get it right. It is not worth risking your engine or worse yet your body parts when it scatters.
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August 4, 2013 at 8:54 pm #36281
Well, Bob and Spring, you have certainly put the fear of God into me as regards trying to fix the pump myself. Thanks. Truthfully, when I saw the mangled metal bits in the bottom of the out-of-oil pump, I pretty much figured I'd be buying a new one. I'll still probably take the thing apart to see what went wrong, but will be ordering a new one tomorrow.
It took me until today to get the old pump completely off. I had to make a puller to get the flange that the helical drive gear it mounted to off the pump shaft. The shaft is keyed to the flange and the key looked like it had long since been sheared. The only thing keeping it timed properly was the bolt holding the flange to the shaft.
This is my first tractor so I am no expert, but from the looks of that pump, I'd guess the truth was stretched somewhere along the line when it came to me with “only 280 hours” last year. And I've put on less than 120 hours since.
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August 4, 2013 at 9:31 pm #36282
There's hours and then there's hours, depending on the level of service stress. Not all hours are created equal, so to speak.
You haven't experienced the full thrill of a diesel engine until you're heard a big V-8 diesel engine go into runaway – one of those tings trying to turn 6000rpm or more will make your blood run cold and a certain portion of your intimate anatomy pucker up too tight to pull a needle through. Been there, done that. Never again! I wouldn't touch an injector pump no matter what.
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August 5, 2013 at 8:46 am #36284
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August 5, 2013 at 11:20 am #36285
Wow, Bob, that is one dramatic video. I found myself instinctively pulling back away from the computer screen as that baby revved up.
Just got off the phone with Tommy ordering my new pump. Had another good chat with him, he described how the timing is done, and said he'll be glad to walk me through the procedure when the pump gets here. Thanks again, Rich, for steering me to Affordable. Between the valuable help of Tommy, Harold, and all you guys, this job is going to get done.
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August 5, 2013 at 2:06 pm #36286
And the most important thing is that you'll be safe.
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August 5, 2013 at 2:15 pm #36287
Here is one more that illustrates the use of starting fluid. Stand back.
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August 5, 2013 at 4:09 pm #36290
Here is one more that illustrates the use of starting fluid. Stand back.
It would take all three of those guys to make a 1/2 wit !!!
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August 5, 2013 at 4:18 pm #36291
What made me laugh looking at the last video was the truck. Many years ago I worked for a land leveling company. They had an old hunk a crap like that truck with a 5th wheel and a low boy trailer. They bought a used D9. They used that truck 4-71 and all to haul that 9 around locally from job to job. I actually got up to 12 miles an hour ONCE!
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August 5, 2013 at 7:21 pm #36293
That reminds me of the old '54 Dodge 6×6 PowerWagon we had when I volunteered with Rocky Mountain Rescue Group back in the 60's – we'd be running Code 3 up Boulder Canyon and cars would have to pass us to get out of our way. It may have been slow but it would go anywhere it could muster the traction or find an anchor point for the PTO winch. We winched it up a cliff face one time and I'd swear the thing was dangling like a pendulum. I have no idea how the engine could even run in that attitude, but it did. Scared the cr*p outta me, too.
During that same period I worked part time as a wrecker driver and the boss usually had me run the old '52 Chevy ton-and-a-half with the split-boom Holmes 500. That thing was a complete dog on the road but it would snatch cars out of the creek bottom in the canyon all day long without breaking a sweat. Ugly as a mud fence, though!
When you're 18 years old, driving a pig like that Chevy makes it really hard to feel cool and macho – I much preferred the Ford 4×4 with the Holmes 550, but it actually had a working heater so the boss ran that one himself, the selfish rat.
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August 7, 2013 at 8:43 am #36310
As my new pump makes its way here from Texas, I'm giving Tommy a few days break from phone babysitting. Anyway, removing the radiator to get a good view of the timing marks on the crank pulley afforded an excellent opportunity to straighten the many bent fins and hose out the accumulated debris.
So now that I've got the crank at 14 degrees before top dead center per his instructions, here's my stupid question to you all: how do I know if it's TDC of compression or TDC of exhaust? (This is a 4-stoke engine, right?)
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August 8, 2013 at 11:24 am #36314
Pop the valve cover and look at the valves on #1 cylinder. If neither are depressed and you can “wiggle” them, then you are where you are supposed to be.
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August 8, 2013 at 12:25 pm #36315
Thanks, Bob. I was thinking to try a simpler way, but your suggestion gives me a reason to continue cleaning the engine, at least to get all the crud off around the valve cover. And give me a chance to check and adjust the valve lashes, (which I bet has never been done on this machine.)
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August 8, 2013 at 8:46 pm #36316
YESSSSS!!! The sweet sound of success at 4PM today.
Started right up after timing set — ran very rough.
Advanced pump at timing gear: Didn't start at all.
Retarded pump same amount: Purrrrs.
Thanks to all of you for assistance, warnings, and entertainment.
Mike Klaus
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August 9, 2013 at 7:40 am #36318
Glad you got it going and it all worked out OK, we appreciate the business also
Tommy
Affordable Tractor Sales
“Your Jinma Parts Superstore”
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August 10, 2013 at 12:30 pm #36320
Yep, that's great news. Thanks for keeping us updated on the job – I get crazy when a thread dies with no resolution posted.
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August 11, 2013 at 8:42 pm #36321
Glad to run the thread to its end. You may have sensed I was in pretty high spirits when I posted the resolution.
Almost kept the thread going yesterday when I worked the tractor for the first time since fixing the engine. The water temp barely got above 60 C after 15 minutes of tilling. Typically, since I've owned it, the temp gets up to 80 after just a bit of work, and can hit 90 or more on a hot day. So I feared I'd messed something up with the temp sensor or the cooling system when I put things back together.
It turns out all those mashed over fins I fixed when the radiator was out, and the packed crud I hosed out, was having a bigger effect on the cooling performance than I would have guessed. After half and hour's work today, it got almost to 80. Feels good to have a cooler running engine.
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