JandL wrote:By the Tach, it will not idle at 1900, dies at around 2100 or so. There is NO idle stop, unless one counts the carburetor body itself, there is NO adjustment screw for idle at all.
OK then post was mis-titled.
Runs good at top no load speed if held manually but not with the governor.
Ran for 8-10 minutes and it never smooth's out under governor control.
Bowl nut is clear, ran a wire in it as you stated and it squirts cleaning fluid out both sides when sprayed in the jet.
float is right on, needle seat is secure.
Talked to Briggs and Stratton rep in my area today. He states this engine setup like it, has no idle and is setup to run at top no load speed only. So, running at top no load speed when held manually but not being able to do it with the governor would tell him its a fault in the carburetor.
Got it bass-ackwards. If it SMOOTHS OUT and runs steady with no change in engine speed when you hold the throttle *STEADY* at top no load, it is caused by a governor issue. a new carb won't fix it. If you hold the throttle steady and it continues to lean out until it wants to die (or stumbles, or otherwise does NOT maintain the RPM it should) , THEN the problem is carburetion or air leak.
At the cost of the carb, around $35.00 I think my customer is better served by me getting a new carburetor for his snow blower.
Thoughts ?
First make sure which way is correct.
The governor test is to hold the throttle steady, and if the hunting or surging STOPS, and the engine DOES NOT change engine speed from where you hold the throttle, (It has no idle circuit per se, as there is no idle stop screw, as you mentioned, so trying to hold it to idle will cause it to die out) then the problem is in the governor controls somewhere.
If you hold the throttle manually at 3600 RPM ,or whatever top no load speed is,
and the engine STAYS at 3600 RPM and runs SMOOTHLY, it is
NOT the carburetor at fault (Unless of course, the cause of the governor hunting is caused by a worn or binding throttle lever!)
How poor are they who have not patience. What wound did ever heal, but by degrees? - Iago (Othello Act II, Scene 3)