I`ve had a hot idling issue start recently & I suspect its the anti stall solonoid.
Has anyone had one go & what were the symptoms when it did.
Ta!
Has anyone had one go & what were the symptoms when it did.
Ta!
I can't actually say that I've ever had one fail, except on the fuel saving versions with cutoff-control unit (those sometimes fail and then the fuel cutoff plunger tip gets cut off with pliersA less-brutal solution is to wire it to the ignition coil positive terminal which I think is what your Uno has).
Take the top off the carburettor and remove the jets, blow everything out with compressed air - and refit the top without gasket sealant, as that tends to end up blocking the jets, don't ask how I know thisYou know this anyway but I think an intermittently-blocked idle jet is rather more likely than an intermittent solenoid. Still, all things are possible. Clean the solenoid connections/solder any crimped connectors that you find?
Another likely possibility is an overheating ignition module (bad ground in distributor?) but that would be hard to get going again and wouldn't respond to a couple of accelerator pumps like a fuel cutoff-valve problem would.
-Alex
I hope you get some better answers from other people, but in the meantime, based on the additional info, I think your diagnosis is spot-on.
Maybe check/clean the float needle valve just in case it really IS flooding? I had some similar symptoms when I saw one of these 32TLF carbs literally overflowing with petrol once (could see fuel gurgling into the venturi).
Incidentally - don't want to be petty, but re: the thread subject, I think the purpose of the solenoid on the Uno 45 FIRE is not as an 'anti stall valve' but rather as an 'anti run-on device', to alleviate the running-on effects - caused by high compression (pre-ignition/dieseling), poor quality fuel, and potentially high idle speed if the choke is in use - when the key is switched off. I could be wrong.
-Alex
Eratic idle can also be symptomatic of an intake air leak. Check the vacuum pipe from the carburettor to the dizzy mounted diaphragm, though I would have though this would be give permanent rather than intermittent symptoms. As it is intermittent and more likely to occur after the engine has been running I suspect that the ignition module may be at fault. If you still think it is running rich then do a plug chop - that will show straight away if the problem is fuel related (black sooty electrodes indicate on over rich mixture though ignition failure can also cause this).