HondaG100 wrote:I did not suggest it because these engines normally have a solenoid that immediately shuts off all fuel directly at the emulsion tube. An intermittent failure might cause a shutdown similar to a fuel starvation issue but it isn't my first guess.
Right - that's the anti-afterfire solenoid I refer to. So these normally *DO* have one? Could be stuck, internal failure (heat), bad ground, bad connection , or voltage dropping out from it?
They will still draw fuel up through the idle circuits if the engine is running at dead idle, *most* of the ones I am familiar with can run (although poorly) even with the AA Solenoid stuck or inoperative.. throttling up from dead idle, engine starves out and dies.
- he *does* mention it idles fine, so *assuming* (remember I have never seen a Land Pride machine) it is actually idle when things are started off, when load is applied, it will be coming *OFF IDLE* and thus, starving for fuel if solenoid is sticky or maybe only partially opening... ??
Just some thoughts.
How poor are they who have not patience. What wound did ever heal, but by degrees? - Iago (Othello Act II, Scene 3)