I have an Ingersoll tractor in the shop powered by a 20HP Onan (P220G-I/11457H). The owner bought it for about $200 from a local metal recycling place. The previous owner just wanted to get rid of it, evidently.
It would only spark on one cylinder, so I replaced the ignition coil to fix that problem. Then I discovered that although both sides were getting spark, the engine still ran on just one cylinder. No compression on the dead cylinder. I thought it was probably a valve stuck open or something like that, but when I took the head off and rotated the crankshaft, the piston didn't move. Bummer, probably not worth fixing. The dead cylinder, by the way, is the same one that wasn't getting any spark at first.
It's things like this that make me question my diagnostic practices. When I didn't get spark on the bad cylinder, it never occurred to me to also run a compression check, to see if the engine was worth investing in a new ignition coil. After all, it is highly unlikely that a cylinder will have a broken rod AND no spark. Yet customers are paying me to be the professional who "should've known." So I'm trying to figure out the best way to avoid these situations in the future.
Do any of you just test compression as a routine check? I never have, and if I start making every test I know a routine procedure, I'm going to waste a lot of time. In hindsight, I guess that since the owner wasn't aware of the equipment's history (since he bought it from a scrapyard), it may have been a good idea to check around a little more than if he'd been using it and it suddenly lost spark on one side.
So was this just "one of those things," or do any of you have shop practices which, if I had implemented those same practices here at my shop, would've prevented this situation?
Thanks