• Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!

  • Microsoft MSN, Live, Hotmail, Outlook email users may not be receiving emails. We are working to resolve this issue. Please add support@steelsoldiers.com to your trusted contacts.

 

One more 4A032 carb float question

kgraeser

New member
8
0
0
Location
MD
I'll keep the story short and just say I concluded that I needed a new carb for my 4AO32 powered genset. Got a new carb in from Saturn and bam! - the engine starts first pull (repetitively) and runs like a dream ....... for 2 days. Then back to the no start doldrums. The engine does respond and run for 1-2 seconds to starting fluid so I'm convinced there's no ignition problem. My question: is 3 or 4 days soaked in gas (in the carb bowl) really enough to swell the float in a brand new carb (and thereby render the engine unable to start)? Thanx in advance!
 

Recovry4x4

LLM/Member 785
Super Moderator
Steel Soldiers Supporter
34,014
1,814
113
Location
GA Mountains
I would lean more towards a fuel delivery problem. Use a bottle or gas can and gravity feed the carb to see if it will run. The fuel pump diaphrams are not long lasting.
 

kgraeser

New member
8
0
0
Location
MD
Thanx fro the tip. I can see strong fuel pump output when using the priming lever (with pump to carb fuel line disconnectd)
 

kgraeser

New member
8
0
0
Location
MD
Thanx for your follow-up and I will try the gravity feed just to eliminate fuel delivery as a cause. FWIW, when I removed carb today I found intake manifold dry as a bone despite probably 20+ pulls. Does the float sticking problem always result in a flooded engine or can it also produce a fuel starved engine?
 

PeterD

New member
622
6
0
Location
Jaffrey, NH
AFAIK, a stuck float can result in either condition, but usually it causes flooding. ;-) The problem may arise that should that be the problem, it is also possible that the various passages in the carburetor may also be clogged up, so even if you unstick the float, it may not run. (Only an experiment will tell for sure.)
 

kgraeser

New member
8
0
0
Location
MD
Thanx Peter. I disassembled the carb today and it appeared to me the float was sticking on the side of the float bowl. I'll reassemble and give the current carb another try.
 

Chief_919

Well-known member
2,050
100
63
Location
Western NC
The floats in these carbs are very, very sensitive to ethanol in gas. Use gas with ethanol, and you will get that exact result.
 

ralbelt

Active member
1,056
9
38
Location
West Warwick, R.I.
Did you replace the fuel line going to the carb. If not it is possible that some foreign material is sitting in the fuel inlet fitting and not passing fuel. If the needle is a little sticky and staying closed it is possible to wipe it on a very fine honing stone to clean it. Do not soak any rubber tipped needles or rubber seats in carb cleaner. Being a new carb you should not have to soak it.
 

kgraeser

New member
8
0
0
Location
MD
Understand the ethanol sensitivity issue but if that is in fact my problem, I'm absolutely amazed that the swelling carb float occurred and incapacitated the engine in a period of less than four days of fuel exposure.

If a period of less than four days' exposure to fuel queers the carb, how can this engine ever be relied on to supply emergency power?

Seems like even precautionary measures like running all fuel out of engine at completion of use would still leave the float exposed to residual fuel (and susceptible to swelling).
 

doghead

4 Star General /Moderator
Staff member
Super Moderator
Steel Soldiers Supporter
26,247
1,168
113
Location
NY
I think the clearance on the float is too close. Iirc, they were troublesome with leaded fuel with varnish after long term storage.

I think I have read where people sanded the float to make it slightly smaller.

Ethanol fuel is wreaking havoc on all kinds of things. They have legislated the usefulness right out of gas and diesel. The guys passing laws have no idea what the real effects are.
 

ralbelt

Active member
1,056
9
38
Location
West Warwick, R.I.
DH is right on with the ethanol problems.
Being in the aircooled industry when we pickle [prepare for long term storage] an engine first it is fully serviced then it is drained almost totally of fuel, add stabilizer, then run dry. We then add about a quart of off road fuel, no ethanol, with stabilizer and allow to run dry. Then the tank, fuel lines and carb are blow dried, then we inject marvel mystery oil into the carb, fuel lines and tank. A small amount on top of piston is also added.
Yes it will smoke for a few minutes when it restarts 1,2,5,10 years down the road but it will start.

This past week with the after effects of Irene the only thing we did was generator repairs. Every one had fuel related problems and all said ran when parked.
 

kgraeser

New member
8
0
0
Location
MD
Thanx guys and I apologize for going into "whine" mode on my earlier post. I had a lot of pride in my machine as compared to neighbors' Chinese imports and it let me down terribly during Irene. Even with that, I'm still trying to get it running reliably and sonuvab#@%& won't cooperate. Really frustrating but I'm not giving up.
 

Chief_919

Well-known member
2,050
100
63
Location
Western NC
Understand the ethanol sensitivity issue but if that is in fact my problem, I'm absolutely amazed that the swelling carb float occurred and incapacitated the engine in a period of less than four days of fuel exposure.

If a period of less than four days' exposure to fuel queers the carb, how can this engine ever be relied on to supply emergency power?

Seems like even precautionary measures like running all fuel out of engine at completion of use would still leave the float exposed to residual fuel (and susceptible to swelling).
Yep. Sucks doesn't it.

Keep in mind when these engines were made, there was no ethanol in gas, so they were not desigend to handle it.

Sta-Bil Marine Fuel Treatment is claimed to counteract the negative effects of ethanol in small engines like this. My suggestion is to traet all fuel you plan to use with the generator.
 

kgraeser

New member
8
0
0
Location
MD
On the topic of 4A032 storage and removing fuel from float bowl to avoid carb float swelling - what do you all think about evacuating residual fuel from carb/float bowl using a Mity-vac or similar suction device (following running majority of fuel out of engine)?
 

Chief_919

Well-known member
2,050
100
63
Location
Western NC
On the topic of 4A032 storage and removing fuel from float bowl to avoid carb float swelling - what do you all think about evacuating residual fuel from carb/float bowl using a Mity-vac or similar suction device (following running majority of fuel out of engine)?
It may help, but the float will still absorb the ethanol during use. You are just delaying the inevitable.

The only solution is to either use ethanol free gas or use a treatment to remove the ethanol before you use it. Anything esle is a band aid.

You can usually find stations advertising ethanol free gas anywhere near a popular boating location, as ethanol is a big problem for outboard engines.

Here is a website listing stations that carry ethanol free gas.
Ethanol-free gas stations in the U.S. and Canada
 
298
8
18
Location
Olean Ny
I've modified an all Brass float and have it installed in a Spare Carb. I'm hoping to try running it here sometime, if free time ever comes back around.
 

m139h2otruck

Member
569
5
16
Location
NH
I have had good luck running the fuel out of the carb on shutdown with both the 2a016 and 4a032 engines. Never had a problem while they were running (4 cylinder unit ran for over 6 days a couple of years ago in an ice storm). Also, have added non-detergent oil to the gas @ about a quart to 10-15 gallons which seems to help some too.
 
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website like our supporting vendors. Their ads help keep Steel Soldiers going. Please consider disabling your ad blockers for the site. Thanks!

I've Disabled AdBlock
No Thanks