- Joined
- Aug 31, 2006
- Messages
- 3,290
- displayname
- Home of the Plow Special
Mike-
You shouldn't have ANY chunks of ANYTHING coming out of your carb like that. It sounds to me like you need to do what I call "the job" to your tractor, which I've had to every tractor I've owned when it first arrives in my garage.
"The job" consists of pulling the entire fuel system apart. I remove the carb, fuel line, and tank. Then dump as much of the gas out of the tank as I can. If it looks to be fresh gas, I'll use a stack of paper-toweling as a "coffee filter" and then dump the gas into a container with the papertowel in the opening of the container to catch any contaminants. After that, the tank gets a good squirt of dish-washing liquid inside, then filled about halfway with warm water. Put the lid back on, plug the outlet hole with your finger and shake like mad. The tank will need MULTIPLE rinsings to get the soap out, and then needs to set in the sun for a good 6-8hrs to dry out.
After that I'll pull the carb apart and see what it looks like inside. If it looks like it needs it, I'll drop it in a can of carb cleaner and stick a rebuild kit in it the next day. Slap it together with a new fuel line and you're good to go. Sometimes you can get away with spraying it down with a can of carb cleaner and putting it back together if it ran fine to begin with.
It seems like every tractor I've ever bought has crap rolling around in the bottom of the tank, and this ensures that the crap never presents a problem in the future. This may be your issue, but even if it isn't what is currently causing your tractor to run poorly, it will give you problems in the future if you don't take care of it now.
Also, look in the bottom of your gas cans to make sure you don't have any contaminants in any of those as well. It would SUCK to do all of this work and then dump crappy gas back in the tank. I make it a habit to look in the bottom of my gas cans just before I refill them. If there's stuff in the bottom of the can, it WILL end up in your carb at the worst possible time.
Reggie-
You shouldn't have ANY chunks of ANYTHING coming out of your carb like that. It sounds to me like you need to do what I call "the job" to your tractor, which I've had to every tractor I've owned when it first arrives in my garage.
"The job" consists of pulling the entire fuel system apart. I remove the carb, fuel line, and tank. Then dump as much of the gas out of the tank as I can. If it looks to be fresh gas, I'll use a stack of paper-toweling as a "coffee filter" and then dump the gas into a container with the papertowel in the opening of the container to catch any contaminants. After that, the tank gets a good squirt of dish-washing liquid inside, then filled about halfway with warm water. Put the lid back on, plug the outlet hole with your finger and shake like mad. The tank will need MULTIPLE rinsings to get the soap out, and then needs to set in the sun for a good 6-8hrs to dry out.
After that I'll pull the carb apart and see what it looks like inside. If it looks like it needs it, I'll drop it in a can of carb cleaner and stick a rebuild kit in it the next day. Slap it together with a new fuel line and you're good to go. Sometimes you can get away with spraying it down with a can of carb cleaner and putting it back together if it ran fine to begin with.
It seems like every tractor I've ever bought has crap rolling around in the bottom of the tank, and this ensures that the crap never presents a problem in the future. This may be your issue, but even if it isn't what is currently causing your tractor to run poorly, it will give you problems in the future if you don't take care of it now.
Also, look in the bottom of your gas cans to make sure you don't have any contaminants in any of those as well. It would SUCK to do all of this work and then dump crappy gas back in the tank. I make it a habit to look in the bottom of my gas cans just before I refill them. If there's stuff in the bottom of the can, it WILL end up in your carb at the worst possible time.
Reggie-