showme1946
New member
The equipment: 1981 Ford 4610SU with 3 cyl. diesel, more than 7,000 hours; I've owned it since February; all fluids new, new filters, new radiator and thermostat; everything else old (including owner).
Attachments: Koyker K2 loader that was on tractor when new; JD 7' rotary cutter.
The question: The tractor has been running like a top. Yesterday I was mowing ("brush hogging") in a pasture, and I hit an old stump. There was a lot of noise and shuddering as the cutter chewed up the stump, but then the tractor engine suddenly quit. It will not start. It turns over fine, the starter is fine, fuel tank is full, fuel comes out when I loosen the bleed screw in the fuel pump, the battery is fine.
The service manager at my local New Holland dealer wondered if maybe the driveline shock that occurred when I hit the stump caused the (old, worn) engine to jump timing.
I have learned that the cam timing and fuel pump timing are controlled by a gear train of helical gears on the front of the engine. I suppose, after 36 years and >7,000 hours those gears could be so worn that they would jump a tooth or two given a sufficient shock.
I'm interested in what the sages of tractor-by-net, who have saved my bacon more than once, think of this situation. Why would hitting a stump with a brush hog cause a diesel tractor engine to quit and then not restart? Is jumped timing a good possibility?
thanks in advance for your help.
George.
Attachments: Koyker K2 loader that was on tractor when new; JD 7' rotary cutter.
The question: The tractor has been running like a top. Yesterday I was mowing ("brush hogging") in a pasture, and I hit an old stump. There was a lot of noise and shuddering as the cutter chewed up the stump, but then the tractor engine suddenly quit. It will not start. It turns over fine, the starter is fine, fuel tank is full, fuel comes out when I loosen the bleed screw in the fuel pump, the battery is fine.
The service manager at my local New Holland dealer wondered if maybe the driveline shock that occurred when I hit the stump caused the (old, worn) engine to jump timing.
I have learned that the cam timing and fuel pump timing are controlled by a gear train of helical gears on the front of the engine. I suppose, after 36 years and >7,000 hours those gears could be so worn that they would jump a tooth or two given a sufficient shock.
I'm interested in what the sages of tractor-by-net, who have saved my bacon more than once, think of this situation. Why would hitting a stump with a brush hog cause a diesel tractor engine to quit and then not restart? Is jumped timing a good possibility?
thanks in advance for your help.
George.
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