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Everett Phillipston

Everett Phillipston

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ok, here we go;
I’ve searched thru and read a bunch about the ignition coil, mtronic carb reset, etc. here’s what I did...

1) New wiring harness from coil to carb servo connection- old one had two yellow & red wires cut. New Wires look good.
2) gapped flywheel with a business card...made sure the “key” was lined up with notch in crank spline
3) checked and cleaned ignition “point” surfaces
4) checked all contact surfaces on switch for cold start, run, & stop. Everything looks kosher
5) took muffler off and visually inspected piston and cylinder. Looks good.
6) saw idles in cold start. Let it go for 2 minutes for mtronic reset/calibration
7) saw will not rev/climb ...bogs out, catches itself and resumed idle if I don’t force the issue. If I do, stalls.
8) wont restart. Let it cool, will idle at cold start.

Suspected diagnosis: bad ignition module-won’t function at temp.
Tell me I’m wrong, and why.

Many thanks!
 
stihl86

stihl86

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Since it runs in cold start for 2 minutes, it might not be the solenoid. But on the other hand, it could be. The joys of a electronically controlled fuel system.
Just make sure the ex screen isn't clogged, I've never seen one clog on a Mtronic. But its possible.
And don't forget the saw uses a very conventual carburetor which is susceptible to dirt.
Rule out the fuel delivery system before looking at the module.
Either way, module should carry a two year warranty. Just for info.
 
Sepia

Sepia

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If you suspect ignition module is failing once hot, check for spark at plug when you get a no start situation. After that, I would do a pressure/vacuum test if you have the tools. Also, check condition of plug when saw quits: wet? dry? color?
 
Everett Phillipston

Everett Phillipston

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
May 6, 2018
Messages
138
Location
Massachusetts
If you suspect ignition module is failing once hot, check for spark at plug when you get a no start situation. After that, I would do a pressure/vacuum test if you have the tools. Also, check condition of plug when saw quits: wet? dry? color?

What is the purpose of pressure vacuum test at this stage? Plug is wet. Even when saw fires, it is impossible to see spark when plug is grounded to cylinder. I tried it in a dark room and could not verify spark; put the plug back in for ***** n giggles, went out and it fired up.
 
Sepia

Sepia

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I assume your plug is gapped correctly - likely .020" but don't take my word for it. Try a different plug and see if you still can't see spark - you should be able to see it quite easily in a moderately dark room. Wet plug says you are getting plenty of fuel and you have good compression I assume - that leaves ignition.

Purpose of pressure/vac test is to eliminate the possibility of an air leak somewhere. If you have the tools it is a free test and is better than using the Magic Eight Ball diagnostic tool :dumb:
 
Everett Phillipston

Everett Phillipston

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
May 6, 2018
Messages
138
Location
Massachusetts
I assume your plug is gapped correctly - likely .020" but don't take my word for it. Try a different plug and see if you still can't see spark - you should be able to see it quite easily in a moderately dark room. Wet plug says you are getting plenty of fuel and you have good compression I assume - that leaves ignition.

Purpose of pressure/vac test is to eliminate the possibility of an air leak somewhere. If you have the tools it is a free test and is better than using the Magic Eight Ball diagnostic tool :dumb:


Compression is a healthy 170. FYI
 
Everett Phillipston

Everett Phillipston

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
May 6, 2018
Messages
138
Location
Massachusetts
I assume your plug is gapped correctly - likely .020" but don't take my word for it. Try a different plug and see if you still can't see spark - you should be able to see it quite easily in a moderately dark room. Wet plug says you are getting plenty of fuel and you have good compression I assume - that leaves ignition.

Purpose of pressure/vac test is to eliminate the possibility of an air leak somewhere. If you have the tools it is a free test and is better than using the Magic Eight Ball diagnostic tool :dumb:


Can you recommend a good vac test gauge? I have a compression tester already. Vacuum test I would assume is aka a leak down test?
 

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