DawsonAcres
New member
Thanks, this is all helpful info. I am also an hour north of SF. Maybe these two old 186D are neighbors?Also in NorCal, an hour north of SF, and a YM186D. This tractor starts easily in our climate and likely would without using the thermostart at all. After 15 seconds of thermostart it fires instantly or within a couple revolutions of the crankshaft. But it does smoke when it hasn't run for a while. My theory is like an old car, there is oil running down the valve stems when it sits.
I suspect you are running the thermostart far too long and it may be warm but not igniting the dripped fuel. So all that black smoke is the dribbled fuel from the thermostart.
Yanmar's manuals - and my experience - (that's my YM240 thermostart photo in the Hoye description) - say the thermostart flame ignites with an audible pop, or poof, after 15 seconds. You might need to remove the air filter element to hear it on this model. I would investigate that, next.
With no glow plugs, testing compression is a major project on these. Getting the injectors out then back in and sealed completely is nearly a pro mechanic project. And needs a $100 tool to get the injectors out in condition they can be re-used, at least on my similar YM240. Then the cost of the compression tester. If you can feel compression resistance while it cranks I wouldn't worry about compression yet.
You are spinning it with compression released, then dropping the release lever after it's spinning, no?
Thermostarts are cheap, under $20 on Ebay. There's only one version regardless of description. But some include a screw for the wire while all accept a slide-on connector. Its trivial to install. I would replace that as the next effort.
And finally, Don't use Starting Fluid like they use on large diesels!!!
Yes I have tried using the compression release and it doesn’t seem to make much difference. I will try using the thermostart for shorter duration as suggested as well as pulling the intake to see if I am actually getting a flame.