Tango-Charlie
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 8, 2016
- Messages
- 82
I'm a new Bobcat 742B owner and new to this forum. The engine is the Mitsubishi gas. When I was cleaning it I could smell an order of gas but never found any leak after checking the fuel lines, fuel filter, and fuel shutoff valve next to the fuel tank. After spending several hours cleaning the machine and replacing the governor and alternator belts and the fuel filter everything was working and engine starting and running fine.
I ran the 742B again and pulled it into the garage and again could smell gas but did not find any leak or drip. After running it again I parked it in the barn and turned off the manual fuel shutoff valve next to the gas tank because of the order of gas.
A couple days later I went out and turned on the gas shutoff valve and cranked, cranked and cranked and it finally started on full choke. I would also note that the outside temperature was about 20 degrees but had the block heater plugged in for about an hour to heat the block up. It died after about a minute or two and had to restart it about 6 times.
The last time it stayed running for about 4 minutes and then died out sounding like fuel starvation. After letting it sit for a couple minutes it started again and I let it warm up. It ran fine and I pulled it into the heated garage again and shut it off and could again smell the heavy odor of gas but couldn't find any leak.
I have the service and parts manuals and thinking the fuel solenoid is sticking open when shutoff I have a couple of questions as the manuals does not discuss it. The fuel shutoff solenoid in the parts and maintenance manual only shows 1 wire so it must ground itself.
Questions:
1. If the fuel shutoff solenoid is bad and will not close when the ignition key is turned off will the carburetor dump fuel overboard creating the heavy gas smell.
2. After turning off the fuel valve next to the gas tank and letting the machine sit for a couple of days and if the fuel shut off solenoid is bad will this dump the remaining fuel in the fuel line between the carburetor and the tank shut off valve making it hard to start and die out until it draws enough fuel from the tank?
3. The hard start problem only occurred after I turned off the fuel shutoff valve next to the gas tank and let it sit for a couple days. All other times when not shutting off the manual fuel shutoff valve it always started up right away. Would this contribute to possibly a bad fuel solenoid?
Any other suggestions or help would be appreciated to try and figure out where the heavy odor of gas is coming from and the starting problem after turning off the manual fuel shutoff valve next to the gas tank.
I ran the 742B again and pulled it into the garage and again could smell gas but did not find any leak or drip. After running it again I parked it in the barn and turned off the manual fuel shutoff valve next to the gas tank because of the order of gas.
A couple days later I went out and turned on the gas shutoff valve and cranked, cranked and cranked and it finally started on full choke. I would also note that the outside temperature was about 20 degrees but had the block heater plugged in for about an hour to heat the block up. It died after about a minute or two and had to restart it about 6 times.
The last time it stayed running for about 4 minutes and then died out sounding like fuel starvation. After letting it sit for a couple minutes it started again and I let it warm up. It ran fine and I pulled it into the heated garage again and shut it off and could again smell the heavy odor of gas but couldn't find any leak.
I have the service and parts manuals and thinking the fuel solenoid is sticking open when shutoff I have a couple of questions as the manuals does not discuss it. The fuel shutoff solenoid in the parts and maintenance manual only shows 1 wire so it must ground itself.
Questions:
1. If the fuel shutoff solenoid is bad and will not close when the ignition key is turned off will the carburetor dump fuel overboard creating the heavy gas smell.
2. After turning off the fuel valve next to the gas tank and letting the machine sit for a couple of days and if the fuel shut off solenoid is bad will this dump the remaining fuel in the fuel line between the carburetor and the tank shut off valve making it hard to start and die out until it draws enough fuel from the tank?
3. The hard start problem only occurred after I turned off the fuel shutoff valve next to the gas tank and let it sit for a couple days. All other times when not shutting off the manual fuel shutoff valve it always started up right away. Would this contribute to possibly a bad fuel solenoid?
Any other suggestions or help would be appreciated to try and figure out where the heavy odor of gas is coming from and the starting problem after turning off the manual fuel shutoff valve next to the gas tank.