Mike VS
Silver Member
Hi all, My last post was almost 2 years ago trying to fix this same problem. First the problem, then what I have tried.
This X749 has a 3 cylinder Yanmar with less than 300 hours. It runs and cuts flawlessly and looks like a new motor/mower. It always starts right up regardless of the temperature and has zero issues other than this. When I start cutting the grass all if perfect until 30 to 45 minutes later when it suddenly dies, sometimes as if I had turned the the key off, other times it sputters a little then dies. It will restart immediately but will die 20-30 seconds later. When I let it sit for 5 minutes, it will run for another 15 more minutes. The run times are extended the longer it sits to "cool down". It doesn't matter if it is cutting 2' tall grass or running in neutral at the shop, it's going to die. It doesn't matter if it's 60 degrees or 85 degrees outside.
Now, this whole time the temp gauge does not show hot, as a matter of fact it is between 25% to 33% in the green and has NEVER gotten any where near the red zone. It operates normally up and down. And it is not acting even slightly like it is running hot, it feels very cool and never gives the impression of an overheated motor.
What I have checked: My prior post helpers have suggested cleaning the screens around the radiator, they are spotless. The thermostat was removed and tested; it opens and closes perfectly. The antifreeze was changed; it looked like new from the bottle. The radiator interior looks like a brand new machine, no rust not even discoloration, all perfect. No dirt or junk in or near the oil cooler or radiator, all clean. Fan, belt, and water pump perfect. Fuel filter changed. Fuel cap vent not plugged.
My question is: What shuts down the fuel supply when it does overheat? I see a solenoid attached to the injector pump, is that what's shutting it down? And where does it get it's signal from, the temp gauge sending unit or a separate sensor? Last year I just lived with it after not being able to figure it out, and just sat back and smelled the roses while it cooled down... I'm sick of that smell about now!
This X749 has a 3 cylinder Yanmar with less than 300 hours. It runs and cuts flawlessly and looks like a new motor/mower. It always starts right up regardless of the temperature and has zero issues other than this. When I start cutting the grass all if perfect until 30 to 45 minutes later when it suddenly dies, sometimes as if I had turned the the key off, other times it sputters a little then dies. It will restart immediately but will die 20-30 seconds later. When I let it sit for 5 minutes, it will run for another 15 more minutes. The run times are extended the longer it sits to "cool down". It doesn't matter if it is cutting 2' tall grass or running in neutral at the shop, it's going to die. It doesn't matter if it's 60 degrees or 85 degrees outside.
Now, this whole time the temp gauge does not show hot, as a matter of fact it is between 25% to 33% in the green and has NEVER gotten any where near the red zone. It operates normally up and down. And it is not acting even slightly like it is running hot, it feels very cool and never gives the impression of an overheated motor.
What I have checked: My prior post helpers have suggested cleaning the screens around the radiator, they are spotless. The thermostat was removed and tested; it opens and closes perfectly. The antifreeze was changed; it looked like new from the bottle. The radiator interior looks like a brand new machine, no rust not even discoloration, all perfect. No dirt or junk in or near the oil cooler or radiator, all clean. Fan, belt, and water pump perfect. Fuel filter changed. Fuel cap vent not plugged.
My question is: What shuts down the fuel supply when it does overheat? I see a solenoid attached to the injector pump, is that what's shutting it down? And where does it get it's signal from, the temp gauge sending unit or a separate sensor? Last year I just lived with it after not being able to figure it out, and just sat back and smelled the roses while it cooled down... I'm sick of that smell about now!
