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Posted

Hi, I have a 2019 Coleman Outfitter 550, purchased from Tractor Supply.  I'm told this is a Hisun Sector 550? Is this correct? I've just gotten mine back from a 5 month visit to the warranty shop for a no start condition. After numerous emails with Coleman and calls to the shop, I finally picked it up Saturday before last. It ran, but ran rough. I was assured by the shop owner, who obviously wanted it out of his yard, that "It'll smooth out as you use it." He tells me it had a bad fuse and dirty fuel.  I believe he has replaced 3 or 4 injectors on this and we did add an inline fuel filter. We got about 45 minutes of easy run time on it. I'm 60, use it on the farm and don't race it. Now I can barely get it to start. I changed the plug for a  brand new NGK same as was in it- no change. In fact when I checked it I found it fairly well fouled and not arcing across the tip, but off the side of the center of the plug to inner plug wall of the threaded portion. The old plug sparked at the gap correctly and it will run. It spits and sputters and won't idle. Acts like a dirty injector to me and I've contacted Coleman again, but  I'm looking at probably a 75 mile trip to get it to a better shop. I've read of people cleaning the injectors, but don't know if it's effective. I have good fuel flow from the pump and no water in the gas, which is 91 non-ethanol.  I can't understand why the injector would get dirty unless the interior of the factory fuel line is deteriorating at this point. 4 grand is about the max RPM it will turn at this point. It's either fuel or an ignition issue I'd say, and I'm thinking fuel.

 

I've got 45 years of small engine, 2 and 4 cycle, and all sorts of farm/auto engine experience under my belt, but this computer controlled, gas injection stuff is outside my comfort zone. I got this into the warranty place a couple weeks shy of the 1 year warranty expiring 5 months back and don't have much faith in Coleman/Hisun taking much more action. So, where would you all start looking if you were me? New Ebay injector to start or what? I've read you reset the ignition control by holding the gas at max for 3 seconds and shutting the machine off with your foot to the floor. I have a Sector 550 shop manual CD but I'm not seeing that or much else yet. Doesn't matter since it won't wind up that high anyway. ?????

Posted

So very sorry to hear of your woes.

I only run premium fuel in mine with an occasional does of octane boost to keep the fuel system clean. Anything else and it spits and sputters like it wants to die.

Posted

I don't have any issues with sputtering, fortunately.  48 hours on the clock.  I do run premium fuel with Stabil.  I will put some Seafoam through it soon.

If you haven't changed your oil for the first time yet, it's a real treat.

Best of luck.

CC

Posted

Hi Bret4207

sorry to hear about the issues. One thing that causes rough running is the seat belt not being fastened. Thought I would through that out just in case. I use a seat belt blank purchased off Amazon. Mine was running rough one day and I removed it and buckled seat belt and it ran better ??

  • Like 1
Posted

Thanks for the replies. Yes, I've done the oil change, quite a trick that first time, I got a different style filter wrench that works good at an auto parts store. Found a great deal of RTV type trash floating in the drain oil the first change! QA doesn't seem to be a big thing with the Chinese builders.

 

We keep the drivers seat belt connected all the time. It's worth a check, though it doesn't act the same as when I used to forget to buckle it.

 

FWIW, I was just contacted by Coleman offering to send the machine to another shop 2 hours away. They are trying I guess.

Posted
3 hours ago, Bret4207 said:

Thanks for the replies. Yes, I've done the oil change, quite a trick that first time, I got a different style filter wrench that works good at an auto parts store. Found a great deal of RTV type trash floating in the drain oil the first change! QA doesn't seem to be a big thing with the Chinese builders.

 

We keep the drivers seat belt connected all the time. It's worth a check, though it doesn't act the same as when I used to forget to buckle it.

 

FWIW, I was just contacted by Coleman offering to send the machine to another shop 2 hours away. They are trying I guess.

Good luck on trying a different place. I purchased mine from original owner and according to their warranty period, it should be still covered, but when I spoke with Jess at Coleman was giving her my info and informed her that I did not know the purchase date and why, she said they "didn't cover used units" ?????   She was happy to give me names of shops near me but that was about it.

From some responses on another thread I posted, it sounds like the service shops are trying to figure out (aka learn) how to work on these things themselves. 

Posted

You are running rich as noted by the fouled spark plug.  Multiple things to try.....you said it was at a repair shop for 5 months???and then came back rough running.  Remove throttle body intake boot from air filter...checking if a critter moved in and choked off the air intake supply.  Don't drive/run around to get dust into the intake.  Start with a new NGK plug.  Next item to check, disconnect the connector to the O2 sensor.  With it missing the signal, the Delphi ign module will default to a almost limp mode.  A bad O2 sensor will run ratty (bad signal) but disconnected.....computer will try to run on a good map.  Another thing is the thermistor mounted in the head.......cold temp will have a high resistance (to ground---the head) and hot reading will be a low resistance.  The voltage source is the ECM (5 volt) with the changing resistance to ground (thus the changing voltage signal) maps the fuel pulse width----think of a carb choke gagging in extra fuel on cold startup and run......Just like a throttle position will have a voltage range from .6v at idle to 4.5v at WOT....wide open throttle......voltage cold will be close to 5v and warm 3v and hot 1v as a general rule of thumb.  IF the wire is open from the ECU to the thermistor, the ECU will see 5 v and think it is at the south pole------COLD=extra fuel.  Check voltage at the thermistor...open wire will indicate 0v but 5v at the ECU pin=extra fuel.  Happy hunting.

Posted

One technique you can try is to pull the injector rail and point the injectors at a cloth while cranking the engine. If the spray is inconsistent you know it is an injector. If all are firing good, borrow a fuel pressure gage from the local parts store and check your fuel pressure at the injector rail. If that is good you can eliminate fuel and look at ignition and compression. Pulling plug wires can help find cylinders that aren't firing.

Posted

Thanks for the thoughts Ben. Some of that is well beyond my comfort and knowledge zone, but it gives me a place to start. I did put a new plug in it but that's the one that fouled so bad, it was an NGK number specified in the manual and was the same as the one in it.  I'll check the intake side. Getting beyond that  and into the sensor testing is a bit beyond my experience level with modern electronics (face it, I'm old) and I would sort of need to see how it's done. If you know of any tutorials, I'd sure appreciate a link. Thanks again for your in depth post!

Posted

Thanks Neil, I have a new injector on the way. I will run the test as suggested before changing anything.

 

One question you all may be willing to comment on- I've heard good things about products from "Motorcylce Doctor" as regards this machine. I see he has injectors at near $70.00 and other places they are down in the $10.00 each category. Does anyone know if the more expensive ones are actually better? Motorcycle Doctor" states his are "Hisun factory" in his ad, but that they've used these in Rhinos or Mules or something and had good luck. I know nothing about them, thoughts?

Posted

As you probably have now realized, if it says HISUN on it, you got hosed.. Even the rep at Massimo Motors told me they dropped HISUN engines last year because of so much problems and they wont even warrenty the ones they sold.. HISUN wont even talk to me... We are all just left holding the bag.. My  Massimo with HISUN engine has spent 6 months of its first year in the shop on 6 visits... Parts are hard to get and warranty is non existent .. Most shops refuse to even work on them now.. They dont get paid .. 

  • Like 2
Posted

Hello again.  I jumped into 3 problems I have seen in the past.  Mice love the filter material....a sitting machine is a welcome mat.  A clogged filter or nest in the intake is the same as a B&S engine turned over and the air filter flooded with engine oil...cannot draw enough air and results in a "choked" carb condition.  Remove the throttle body intake boot (the rubber collar going to the air box) and avoid getting dirt into the intake.  This removes all air flow restrictions.  The reason for a new spark plug is trouble shooting/testing....need a clean plug for the test run.  IF it runs OK with the boot removed, problem is in the intake circuit.  The old fouled plug won't run right and negate any testing done.  The run time is just long enough to see if it works.....BUT not too long as to load it up like the old plug.  STILL NO WORK....next line below.

COMPRESSION and SPARK.  Pull plug and put finger over the spark plug threaded head hole....attempt to hold in any pressure....WOT (gas pedal to floor) and unrestricted intake air (takes air to make AIR), CRANK OVER ENGINE....IF finger blows off with a POP (note might BURN if you seal it too tightly because of the air burst JET) you have enough compression.  Cheap and dirty compression test without tester.  IF GOOD, skip next section below.

NOTE:  low compression and/or a weak spark will mimic a RICH fuel mixture....sooty black plug.  REASON....fuel is not burned completely by misfires....builds up on plug insulator (wet plug) and then foul.  

LOW COMPRESSION.......diesel engines fire (without spark) on HIGH compression of fuel/air mix.  Gas engines only require say 120 PSI compression of the fuel air mix.  Low compression causes:  timing chain jumped (valve timing off), valve adjustment too tight, burnt exhaust valve/seat, rings work or stuck in piston grooves.

SPARK....spin engine over and hold sparkplug to any metal on engine.  Should have nice fat hot spark and not a wispy wimp.  Slowly lift the spark plug thread body away from the engine....should jump a good 1/4 inch gap and then try to find a better path to gnd....that being YOU.  Follow safe methods.  NOW an easy check of the timing of the spark.  Finger over hole as before but LIGHTLY, no throttle required this time, crank engine and observe spark.......should fire on every rotation of the engine (waste spark system) which will be twice (exhaust and compression strokes).  You are looking for a spark timed to the compression POP/spit on your finger.  IF a question of timing...use a timing light BUT you have to remove a cover on pass side of engine to get  to crank rotating member.  I have used a timing light looking thru an INTAKE valve cover lid but this can be confusing because you will see two (2) flashed images....cam runs at half speed so you will see valve closed (COMPRESSION) and a slight blur/shift from overlap where the intake valve starts to open at the EXHAUST to INTAKE stroke time (the wasted spark). 

You had one good suggestion about go juice (starting fluid).  Find fuel tank under pass seat.....round "plug/cover" for fuel pump.  Note the 4 wire connector which is the fuel pump supply +12Vdc and Gnd     and    the fuel level sending unit.  Remove clip and disconnect the 4 wires.....now no fuel pump to 40 PSI...no fuel at the injector after initial residual pressure drop...no chance to foul NEW plug now.  Crank over engine and it might sputter from residual fuel pressure then just plain crank and no run.  Feed the go juice in spurts......to filter (intake duct tube all connected---air box lid OFF).  REASON:  If INTAKE valve is OPEN slightly say due to being adjusted too tight or jumped cam timing, you will get a flash fire back thru throttle body...Risky shooting directly into the throttle body.  DOES the engine run of the burst? and then die after it sucks go juice out of filter.  Try several times and note engine runability.  Crank again and give another shot burst to get running....NOW, you give bursts to keep it running after trailing off and note engine run quality.  IF you can simulate a CARB system (remember the injectors and shooting blanks and the throttle body is now just a carb butterfly valve and YOU are the fuel metering jets and passages), your problem is the fuel metering by the Delphi ECM.

The DELPHI ECM module can fail....seen only one bad on B&S large engine (wounded but NOT dead that did screw up fuel delivery)  but very rare......most fueling problems are due to the multiple inputs to the module.  some were caused by other repair shops sloppy work, wiring harness problems, mice love wire insulation, O2 sensor failure, and so on.  Digest these LOW tech (no scope or meters req'd) testing ideas and get back.....BEN

P.S.  Old is only a state of mind....just don't do stupid stuff because your body doesn't heal as easily.  Give you a hint---loser on first draft lottery....do the math.  

  • Like 1
Posted

Thanks Ben and others! I'll see what I can do and get back to you.

 

Ben, interesting you mention the larger B+S engines. I have a 23hp Vanguard in a skid steer that eats coils. Have to pull the engine to change them. Traced to a (likely) feed back of power to coils through kill switch system. Bypassed that and went with a simple toggle kill switch and it WAS working fine. But my 18 year old was using it and now it's a no start as in the past. This might be a "Dad only" machine!

Posted
6 hours ago, Bret4207 said:

Thanks Ben and others! I'll see what I can do and get back to you.

 

Ben, interesting you mention the larger B+S engines. I have a 23hp Vanguard in a skid steer that eats coils. Have to pull the engine to change them. Traced to a (likely) feed back of power to coils through kill switch system. Bypassed that and went with a simple toggle kill switch and it WAS working fine. But my 18 year old was using it and now it's a no start as in the past. This might be a "Dad only" machine!

some of those briggs V-twin engines have a diode in the kill wires that can go bad and cause that. it can even be insulation wore off on the kill wire going back to the coil and grounding the coil and killing spark, like when you turn the key.

  • Like 1
Posted
On 12/12/2020 at 7:45 AM, Bret4207 said:

Thanks Neil, I have a new injector on the way. I will run the test as suggested before changing anything.

 

One question you all may be willing to comment on- I've heard good things about products from "Motorcylce Doctor" as regards this machine. I see he has injectors at near $70.00 and other places they are down in the $10.00 each category. Does anyone know if the more expensive ones are actually better? Motorcycle Doctor" states his are "Hisun factory" in his ad, but that they've used these in Rhinos or Mules or something and had good luck. I know nothing about them, thoughts?

I’ve purchased several items from Motorcycle Dr. and have had no issues. I’ve also called with questions and they have been very helpful.

Posted
16 hours ago, Travis said:

some of those briggs V-twin engines have a diode in the kill wires that can go bad and cause that. it can even be insulation wore off on the kill wire going back to the coil and grounding the coil and killing spark, like when you turn the key.

Yup, I bypassed that kill wire diode, ran a line direct to ground through a simple toggle switch for a kill. I stupidly used  a spade end connector and it came off a couple times. That might have done some coil damage. I should get more than 2-3 hours run time out of a set of coils!

 

Posted

OT, I know, but the Vanguard problem is rectified. I cleaned up some electrical connectors and I tested the plugs. Had decent fire with a white spark every now and then but I could see the spark on one plug jump to the side pretty often instead of arcing at the tip on the rear side plug. Went to town and picked up the next heat range hotter NGKs. Started right up and ran fine. I'm not sure why a fouled plug(s?) would cause a backfire situation mimicking an out of time/coil issue, but there you have it. I'm counting my blessings as tearing that thing out of the machine is a pain!

 

I'm slowly getting into the Coleman. Figured out how to disconnect the injector and then it started snowing. More today I hope.

  • Like 1
Posted

HI there.....not to bust your bubble BUT your problem of weak spark/good spark MIGHT come back when you need it the most.  Vanguard is a v-twin with a magnet section molded into the flywheel that goes under the respective mag coil for each cylinder.  Go back to the old days when a single cylinder engine was "the" B & S engine.  Remember before the electronic mag ign coils???  Under the flywheel and Al lid was a set of points and condenser.  The little fiber "points pushrod" that rubbed on a flat spot on the crankshaft arm that opened the points to fire the coil?????  The throttle cable "kill switch" that had to be adjusted correctly or it would short the mag coil/points/condenser lead wire to Gnd??? The magnets in the flywheel had to be timed very close to TDC to GENERATE A PEAK MAGNETIC FLUX in the mag coil when the piston came upon TDC on compression stroke..... and......of course the overlap stroke that was wasted.  A sheared flywheel key would be a no start/run condition??? Oh, those were the simple days.  BUT WAIT, magneto/ignition coil circuit/"points" electronics did NOT change......just evolved into electronic switches to replace the high maintenance  points.  The low voltage wire from both coils still "need" points......electronic points that is.  BUT, on the Vanguard V-twin, they tie together and come out as a single wire to the IGN terminal mounted on the cover.  Simple little harness....3 lugs....and a DIODE in each coil leg.  The electronic points will "OPEN" at the correct time for BOTH cylinders.......but there is only 1 magnet in the flywheel and 2 mag coils (1 each cylinder).  Therefore, only one mag coil can be "charged" at a time (when the flywheel magnet rotates under each cylinder's respective coil)....Sorta the same idea behind car engines up to the late 60's (points cam, external ign coil,  and rotor/distributor).....selecting which cylinder gets the spark as needed.  Problem is, EACH of the coils primary currents need to be ISOLATED during it's time/turn for a spark output to get the  FULL or max current then cut OFF quickly.  DIODES to the rescue!!!

DIODES-----one-way electrical valves----current only flows thru diode in one direction

Diode polarity(s) in the harness is Cathode (silver band on black plastic body) to the mag coil terminal.  Both Anodes (the opposite non band end) tie together and go to the "electronic points" cover connector.  The coil current is a NEG pulse generated by the rotating magnet poles that gets cut off (OPEN by the electronic points)----like the old days----The mag coil has to be OVER the magnet poles on the flywheel to generate the "energy"......actually a magnetic field in the coil and laminations.  Thus the coil can only fire when rotated over the flywheel magnet poles AND when the "points switch" OPEN.  There is only one flywheel magnet section.  Thus,the mag coils are energized at different times (V angle) and a NEGATIVE current pulse flows from each mag coil lug AT IT's CHARGING TIME.....thru the DIODE.....then to the electronic switch cover connection.....a CLOSED electronic switch that OPENS at peak for the spark at the correct timing(s).

DIODE FAILURE MODES:

Blown open....no spark on dead section coil.  Other coil has spark.

SHORTS......will have spark at both coils BUT wispy weak---thus fouled plugs.  WHY?  Well, the system has to mimic a mechanical set of points......CLOSED for PEAK coil current when mag coil is over magnet poles....then......OPEN at the desired ign timing point say 8 deg BTDC.....Primary mag coil current at MAX then a sudden break in current (magnetic field energy collapses across the HI side coil winding=high voltage spark on spark plug lead).  With a harness diode shorted, the sudden "point open circuit" has the primary winding of the OTHER coil drawing current (NO ISOLATION or back feed) that "drains" the energy slowly (wispy weak)instead of a rapid coil current cut off (hot spark).

HARNESS DIODE TEST:  Pull the covers to expose the ign coils and the simple 3 lug harness.  METER ALERT!!!!  Digital meter with DIODE test function req'd.  Si diodes have a front to back resistance of very LOW R in one direction to HIGH R...>500K or "open circuit".  Diode Test function runs about 1 ma DC  thru tested diode.

GOOD DIODE.......Meter  will indicate .6 in forward [red (+) to Anode (non band end)] and black (-) to band end.  Reverse leads on diode under test....should show same as before making the connection (OPEN).

SHORTED DIODE.......0 or very low .0002 number BOTH DIRECTIONS.

OPEN DIODE.......HI resistance both ways....same reading on meter with leads in open air.  I like to then go from DIODE FUNCTION to 500K Ohm scale,  wet fingers and hold meter leads to diode leads with wet fingers of both hands....should see around 200K ohm...then open one set of fingers and remove your body resistance from the circuit....just a simple test to make sure the meter is working.....should show open.

 

FINAL WORD        ELECTRONIC PARTS CAN WORK AND THEN FAIL ONLY TO COME BACK AGAIN AND WORK.  These are the worst to  T/S and of course NEVER FAIL when the customer is trying to show how it fails...been there?????

Posted

I'll try again........4 stroke V-twin with probably a 90 deg angle between cylinders.  2 rotations of the crankshaft for INTAKE, COMPRESSION, POWER, and EXHAUST.  Cam runs at 1/2 speed (2 crank rotations per single rotation of the cam).......therefore, you will have the magnet rotate under the dual mag coils TWICE for each cycle.  Timing of the SPARK is req'd around 8 deg BTDC on the COMPRESSION stroke.  A single cylinder engine has 1 mag coil and 1 set of "points" (mechanical or electronic switch).  The Vanguard has 2 mag coils BUT only 1 electronic switch....that opens and closes in time with 8 deg BTDC of BOTH respective cylinders.  The mag coil(s) are "CHARGED"  one at a time spaced 90 deg apart WHEN the magnet poles molded into the flywheel pass under the mag coil lamination "legs".  The Primary winding has the one end connected to GND.  The other end is the side lug going to the points.  The magnetic CHARGING causes a NEG (-) current pulse....same as the OLD point system that has to be suddenly stopped by the points OPENING.  Think of water hammer when shutting of a sink valve TOO fast.  The high tension of the mag coil will pop out 7KV or more when the energy has no where to go when the points open.  Testing would be simpler if there were 2 points or electronic switches for the 2 mag coils.  COSTS MONEY FOR THE SENSE AND DRIVER/SWITCH COMPONENTS.

The combo mag coil primary circuit harness is a 2 into 1 BUT with BLOCKING DIODES.  Without the diodes  (or a faulty diode) the mag coil ( - ) current pulses will feed each other coil primary resulting in a wimpy weak spark in time for 1 cyl and out of time for the other........BOTH ways as the flywheel rotates under the OTHER mag coil legs.  The pair of 10 cent 1N4006 diodes is really a cost savings over having a dual electronic switch ign module.  Diode is one-way current valve.....they are both placed cathode to the coil primary spade lug connection.  When working, each diode will PASS it's respective ( - ) coil current spike to the electronic switch.........BUT cannot flow backwards (blocked) to the non-energized mag coil and steal the spark generating energy.  FAULT results in dual wimpy sparks...1 in time and 1 out of time spark from the other cyl mag coil.

The kill wire also goes to the cover connector like before as was on small lawn mowers for the STOP position of the throttle lever.  Test the diodes...they may test good and then fail later...that is the way they are with mechanical vibration on the leads (breaks the internal termination to pellet).      Easier this time?????

Posted

Gotcha. The issue is with determining whether or not, and just where, the diode is and if it's "leaky" as one tech told me. I don't know how a diode can leak, it's all magic to me, but he says it can happen. I initially thought the kill wire was leaky back through the diode, even though it tested good, but now you've given me other places the fault can occur. For me it's figuring out which little solid state, molded doo-hicky is the offending culprit. Why they need multiple relays, and then some of relay numbers don't appear on anyones parts list, is beyond me.

Posted

DIODE LEAK......Can be just like a water well foot valve (one-way WATER valve) but instead of water leaking off, electrons (i.e. current) flows backwards thru the diode.  They both pass in one (1) direction and restrict flow in the reverse direction.  Get sand into a foot valve, water will leak back and loose prime at the well pump......slow leak.  Over time the sand leak will cut the gasket resulting in a BIGGER leak.  Now the diode......good one passes current (according to the band marking) in one direction WITH a small drop in voltage (0.60V)....thus 12.6v will be 12.0v after going thru the diode.  The diode test meter function measures this voltage drop .6v in the PASS direction.  The BLOCK direction of a GOOD diode will indicate the same as you never touched the leads (OPEN).  Shorted will be way below .6v....like .030V....WOUNDED diode will have a value between open and short (like the grain of sand).

Back to Vanguard......simple test of coils and electronic switch........pull the 2 into 1   B&S  harness and make a jumper (NO DIODE) and connect to the cover terminal tie node (electronic points) with one end.  The other will be put on the individual mag coil terminals (ONE AT A TIME).  If coils are good, the respective cylinder will fire and the other dead.  Move to the other mag coil lug and that one should run OK.  They both generated a NEGATIVE current pulse (interrupted at the PEAK flux and "points" opening have no other leakage paths to GND.   The mag coils and flywheel magnet poles are good AND the electronic points are opening at the right time.  Now, you have only one electronic switch so the diodes have to isolate PASS/BLOCK WHEN required per cylinder.

It might be easier to just buy a new harness as the parts and labor build couldn't be more than $2.00 max.....single one up build....not in qty. purchase prices.  Hope this helps this time.

 

Checked out UTUBE....there is a clip showing the harness....no testing, just replacement.  check it out.....a picture is worth a 1000 words.

Posted

At this point the 2 coils are not connected to anything but a ho'made kill wire run to a toggle switch and to ground on the engine block. Pulling the shrouding to access the coils involves diassembling both sides of the drive train. I should have cut the shroud horizontally last time I had to do this!

Posted

Got the new injector into the Coleman. Fouled the plug out right off. Seems to be putting a crap load of fuel in the cylinder. These things have a choke? The shop manual refers to it, but it's so hard to get to everything I' haven't investigated yet. Picked up 2 new plugs yesterday PM, we'll try it later. Everything seems clear in air intake for those that suggested looking there.

Posted

Pull the connector to the fuel pump.......cannot dump loads of fuel then.  DO the starter fluid runability test where you supply all the fuel by little squirts of the go juice on the air filter in  the air box.  Your unit is FI, therefore NO CHOKE.  The original HISUN were carb models then changed to FI.  The CHOKE function is now ELECTRONIC which is controlled by input signals from O2 sensor, Engine coolant temp thermistor, Mass air flow and intake air temp along with Throttle position sensor to determine engine load and thus the amount of fuel required for the demand.

With the fuel pump disabled, you can then determine your next step.

Posted
On 12/20/2020 at 9:02 AM, Bret4207 said:

At this point the 2 coils are not connected to anything but a ho'made kill wire run to a toggle switch and to ground on the engine block. Pulling the shrouding to access the coils involves diassembling both sides of the drive train. I should have cut the shroud horizontally last time I had to do this!

First thing I'd do would be to get rid of that--however there's no telling what damage being shorted to ground might already have done to the ECU. Properly configured the ignitor output of the ECU never sees a direct short to ground connection--it creates one to dump the coil's charge and generate the spark, however it is never connected directly to ground on a continuous or even intermittent  basis.

Posted
12 hours ago, cliffyk said:

First thing I'd do would be to get rid of that--however there's no telling what damage being shorted to ground might already have done to the ECU. Properly configured the ignitor output of the ECU never sees a direct short to ground connection--it creates one to dump the coil's charge and generate the spark, however it is never connected directly to ground on a continuous or even intermittent  basis.

Cliffy, that set up is on a Briggs Vanguard, not the Hisun/Coleman. We just got off on a tangent. The Briggs had the same set up only they used a relay where I use a toggle. Thanks for the thoughts though!

Posted

Put in the new plug for the Coleman/Hisun. Got it started. It's still sputtering even at idle and going down the road I get to about 5500 RPM and it's like a rev limiter kicks in. I thought maybe it wasn't getting warm enough so set the pedal to a high idle around 3K for 1/2 a hour. The temp gauge came up one bar, but it didn't change the sputtering. I did get a 30 second video I'll try to pass along later.

 

Got to take a kid Christmas shopping.  I hate shopping!

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