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Onan P224 Coil ?

Started by Jeff, June 24, 2005, 07:25:53 PM

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Jeff

Can anyone tell me if these are the same coil?

THe part number on my coil is onan number 166-0761

Wood-mizer parts sheet numbers are
Wood-Mizer# P06827 and beside it it says Onan 614-0523

The feller I talked to at Wood-Mizer said they only have one coil, well those numbers aint even close. Tammy's Mechanic called somewhere today and found my numbers, but Tammy told him I could just get it at Wood-Mizer, so he didnt order it and niether did I cause I think something is fishy. :-\

Pretty sure the Onan 24 on my machine came from somewhere else other then Wood-Mizer.
Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

KILROY

 Jeff.
The replacement coil you will get will not match the one on your motor. It will not look your coil and it will not mount in the same posotion. It will run the motor though. Part number 166-0820 from Onan is the replacement coil. I just went outside and copied that number off from the coil I got from Onan.  A bracket will come with it. I went through this with Onan about two years ago. They do not make that old coil anymore unless you can find one on a dealers shelf somewhere. I doubt this because they have computerized inventory.  WM's numbers and Onan's numbers never have matched when looking for parts for me any. There is a plate on the motor use the information off from it. Even that plate has both companies numbers. Find a local Onan dealer and they can get the right coil.
When WM quit using Onan motors they no longer had access to all the parts. I do not know how it is today.
What is your engine doing? If it is firing on both cylinders it is probably not the coil. If it is not firing at all. It is the electronic pickup behind the flywheel. They tell me there is no way to test it except put a new one on and see if it runs. I have been through two of those and three coils.
If your engine is running clean the carburetor. You will be suprised how much trash and water, especially water, will be found in the carburetor.
That air filter can get clogged in short order too.





Jeff

When the engine runs for over a half hour or so, it suddenly starts missing badly and loses power. Like it is running on one cylinder. When it cools down, it runs what I would call O.K.   Tammy's mechanic from the Bus Garage says he has the same engine on a miller welder and he had the very same symptoms and it was his coil, so that is kinda what I am going by.  I have one coil, with two spark plug wires coming out of it.


It does not seem like a carb problem.  One exaust spews fuel when it starts running bad though.
Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

VA-Sawyer

Jeff,
You may want to check the valve lash. If it has too little then the exhaust valve may be staying open during the compression stroke. This will allow the fuel mixture to come out the exhaust and cause a loss of power. You can check for a coil breakdown with a DC powered timing light. Put it on the side you think is failing and run the engine. When it starts missing, check to see if the light is flashing steady or 'missing' the same as the engine. Is it possible to swap the plug wires and see if the problem moves to the other cylinder ?  I'll take another look at mine tomorrow.
VA-Sawyer

Jeff

I doubt its valve lash as the problem only occurs after running the engine for a half hour or so and then it suddenly starts running poorly.  Shut it down and start it several hours later, and it will be fine, run it for just a few minutes, one log say, its fine, run it a little longer and it will all at once start running poorly.

In order to clean the carb, do I need new intake gasgets? You have to take the intake manifild off to remove the carb.
Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

VA-Sawyer

Jeff,
Valve lash can show up as a thermal problem. The clearance decreases as the engine gets hotter. If it reaches zero clearance then the valve is held open.
Look for a drain plug on the lower side of the carb. I drain mine when I do the oil change. If you can catch the fuel coming out in a little cup, it will allow you to see if you had junk in the bowl.
VA-Sawyer

Jeff

I still gotta think that a valve lash problem would show itself as an oncoming event, even if thermally induced.  this is like somebody throws a switch.
Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

VA-Sawyer

The harder you run it the quicker it acts up right ?

Jeff

No, it can do it just stting there idling. 
Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

VA-Sawyer

Jeff,
I went and got the manual, both spark plugs fire at the same time. If you have seperate exhaust stacks then swap the plug wires and see if the problem moves to the other stack. If it does, then the coil is the problem. WM Manual says P06827 is the correct one. My onan parts manual says the orig PN was 166-0761. If the problem doesn't move to the other side then the coil is probably OK.
VA-Sawyer

Jeff

I'll try that, thats a good idea.
Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

KILROY

 Jeff,
Let me start with the carburetor. No you do not need a new gasket right now. If it looks ok use it. Do not remove the carburetor just to clean it. Take the air filter and housing off. There should be four screw on top of the carburetor. Remove them and lift it off. On the side of the carburetor there is a drain screw. Take it off. Do not lose the little washer! Try to deflect some of the gas or try to catch it. Take some cheap carburetor cleaner(W Mart) spray and clean everything. Take a paper towel and needle nose pliers to wipe the inside of the bowl.Get all the way to the bottom.  When everything looks clean put it back together.
Your coil may be going bad. Is it always the same cylinder that quits running? If it is, swich the wires on the coil to see if the other cylinder will fail. If it does than you are right another coil is needed. It won't hurt to switch the wires because they both fire at the same time anyway. The coil may be breaking down when it gets hot. Borrow that mechanics coil for a day and see if the symptoms are still there.

Minnesota_boy

Jeff,
Don't be afraid to change out the spark plugs.  I've had plugs do the same thing.
I eat a high-fiber diet.  Lots of sawdust!

Jeff

Thats where I started. I thought I had the problem licked.  Figured it was a fouled plug. Couldnt get the right plugs til the next day, so when I put them in and things ran great I figured that was it. No such luck. :-\
Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

VA-Sawyer

Well ?  What did you find ?

Jeff

I posted on another thread last night that I had other duties today. :)
Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

isawlogs

 Jeff
I have one of those P24 on my mill . I took the carb off last year and cleaned it , did not have to take the intake off ... two nuts on the bottom of carb .. they are not easy to get at but can be taken off if you want to clean it off the engin .
There is also a ground wire from the coil that goes down to the switch ... along where the fuel pump is ... make sure that it is grounding well that thing had me going for a good while . Mill was acting just as you say .
A man does not always grow wise as he grows old , but he always grows old as he grows wise .

   Marcel

Dangerous_Dan

Switching the plug wires will do nothing for which cylinder is missing. On 2 cylinder onan engines the spark plugs fire at the same time, once on the power stroke and and again on the exhaust, for both cylinders.
The spark originates at the coil and goes to the first spark plug jumps the gap to the block then through the block and then jumps the gap on the second plug to get to back to the coil.
Sounds like a bad plug or you need a valve adjustment.
Another possibility may be that one of your spark pug wires has a bad spot in the insulation and is arcing to the block somewhere.
What is the exact model of the engine and whats the HP?
First you make it work, then you trick it out!

Jeff

Its a P224  24 horse.  I don't know if its just one cylinder not fireing at this point, it just acts like it could be.
Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

KILROY


Dan,
The reason to switch the coil wires is to see if the coil is bad. If only one cylinder is firing properly, by switching the coil wires you try switch the symptoms between cylinders.

Jeff

I am on my way out to clean the carb. I will try and get some pictures of what I find for future reference on the forum.  :)
Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

Jeff

Well, it certainly needed it. I got lots of crud out of the thing. Once cleaned up it didnt seem to start or run any differently them before however.  I'll know more when I run it. I need to saw about 100 BF of cedar yet ASAP so that should tell me if its better.

The first picture does not have anything to do with cleaning the carb but is a pic of one of the plugs that have less then one hour on them. They both look like this.



Top of the Carb off


draining and catching some gas.


yeck!


Before mopping out, pretty cruddy.


After mopping out, very cruddy.


There was enough in there to remove it with tweezers.



All clean assembled, and ready to put the breather top on.

Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

KILROY


Jeff,
Now that wasn't hard was it? It is a wonder it ran at all with that much trash in it. Now you can check that off from the list of potential problems.
If you can borrow that mechanics coil for a day would help determine if it is the coil.
Good luck.

Jeff

Does anyone feel that a condenser could degrade and cause problems?
Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

KILROY

Jeff,
I do not think that would be your problem. I have had the condenser wire break and the motor ran the same. Ran it like that for a while until I bought a new condenser.

KILROY


Jeff,
With the engine running check the head gaskets for a leak. After you cut the cedar pull the head off from the lowest cylinder. It is usually fouled the worst. Check for carbon build up and if the valves are seating properly.

Gary_C

Jeff

I have a lot of problems with fouled plugs on older gas engines. Just  replace them when they get black and sooty like that.

Don't be surprised if you do have a valve problem. This gasoline has so little lubricating value that sometimes the valves will stick even when just rebuilt. I have had valves stick only after the engine was warmed up and it can happen at idle or at higher speed. On an engine with some hours of running, the valves can stick because of deposits on the valve stem. As the engine warms up the clearances in the valve guides can close up and some valves will stick.

Hope it's something else, but don't overlook that possiability.
Never take life seriously. Nobody gets out alive anyway.

Buzz-sawyer

Your description of the engine running fine for an hour then cutting off like you hit the kill switch is a CLASSIC sign of electrical failure.
It could be a valve issue.....(heating up and expanding)....I would adjust them first any way.
A coil heats with the engine then expands and will cut out at times ....I have encountered this 4-5 times myself.
Your plugs look awful sooty for one hour........have you cleaned the points and taken a good look at them?
I have also seen points with oxidation on them cause similair symptoms... ;)
    HEAR THAT BLADE SING!

KILROY


Engine has electronic ignition. No points. Some of the older engines have points. I have an 18 horse Onan on my lawn mower with points. Need to check every once and awhile.

Fla._Deadheader

  I youster have one a dem Onanns. Had it on a wood splitter I built. After settin for a few months, both exhaust valves would get real sticky. Had to pull both heads and lube 'em.

 Marvel Mystery Oil gits 'er done. !!  :D :D

Drizzle a little down the carb while you run the engine. It will choke down, but, don't let it stall. A little dab-l do ya.  ;D ;D

Might wanna run a hotter plug than whats in it. I've heard about burning pistons doing that, but, 40 years and I haven't burned one yet.  ;) ;)
All truth passes through three stages:
   First, it is ridiculed;
   Second, it is violently opposed; and
   Third, it is accepted as self-evident.

-- Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

Jeff

I gotta think the sooted up plugs were from the 1/2 hour we ran the mill when it was running so bad, trying to get through a log.

ITS HOT HERE!  Tammy and I just sawed up that cedar with no sign of the engine running crappy as it did the last two times we ran it.  Its time to go stick my head in the pool.
Just call me the midget doctor.
Forestry Forum Founder and Chief Cook and Bottle Washer.

Commercial circle sawmill sawyer in a past life for 25yrs.
Ezekiel 22:30

KILROY

 Jeff,
Way to go big guy! That is the kind of repairs I like. Cheap! Just a dirty carburetor.

exfarmer

I realize that this is an old thread and you have probably solved your problem by now, but I thought I'd get my two cents in hoping that it helps someone. I found this post when I googled Onan valve adjustment. I had the same problems that you discribed, Jeff. I had tried every thing! New ignition pickup (over $100), different coils, new plugs & wires. Nothing helped, as soon as it warmed up one cylinder would start missing badly. Next I cleaned the carb (not very dirty) and checked for leaks in the intake. When I had the intake manifold off I checked the valve lash and discovered that there was zero lash on the intake valve of the cylinder that was cutting out! I couldn't find out what the lash should be so I set all the valves at .013. Problem solved although I think the lash should be tighter as now you can hear the lifters ticking. Anyone know what the setting should be?
     Here are some things that I discovered while trying to solve my problem that I hope will be of use to others with Onan engines.
- Ignition pick up module (behind flywheel) can be tested with an ordinairy test light; connect the test lead to the black wire coming from the pickup, with the key on rotate the engine by hand, if the coil is good the light will turn of & on. If you crank the engine with the starter the light should flicker.
- Instead of buying a new, very expensive Onan coil I tried using two Delco coils, one per cylinder. They seem to work fine and produce a good strong spark. 

tnlogger

exfarmer welcome to the best forum on the web good post  8)
gene

jpgreen

I LIKE that Delco coil idea.. !   8)
-95 Wood-Mizer LT40HD 27 Hp Kawasaki water cooled engine-

doug

Quote from: exfarmer on August 24, 2006, 11:56:57 AM
I realize that this is an old thread and you have probably solved your problem by now, but I thought I'd get my two cents in hoping that it helps someone. I found this post when I googled Onan valve adjustment. I had the same problems that you discribed, Jeff. I had tried every thing! New ignition pickup (over $100), different coils, new plugs & wires. Nothing helped, as soon as it warmed up one cylinder would start missing badly. Next I cleaned the carb (not very dirty) and checked for leaks in the intake. When I had the intake manifold off I checked the valve lash and discovered that there was zero lash on the intake valve of the cylinder that was cutting out! I couldn't find out what the lash should be so I set all the valves at .013. Problem solved although I think the lash should be tighter as now you can hear the lifters ticking. Anyone know what the setting should be?
     Here are some things that I discovered while trying to solve my problem that I hope will be of use to others with Onan engines.
- Ignition pick up module (behind flywheel) can be tested with an ordinairy test light; connect the test lead to the black wire coming from the pickup, with the key on rotate the engine by hand, if the coil is good the light will turn of & on. If you crank the engine with the starter the light should flicker.
- Instead of buying a new, very expensive Onan coil I tried using two Delco coils, one per cylinder. They seem to work fine and produce a good strong spark. 

Thanks for a timely post.  I am having the same problem except this engine is on a Toro zero turn mower.  I connected a pass thru neon tester to the spark plug and could see the spark cutting out and then flickering on (immediate backfire).  Once while cranking the engine, I saw no spark at all for about 50 cranks and then suddenly, it was there and the mower started fine.  I have already replaced the coil (the original tested marginal) and condenser and plugs and cleaned out the carburator.  The electronic module behind the flywheel is so difficult to access (I have to remove the engine from the frame and disconnect hydraulic pumps, etc, that I left that off of the repair so far.  By the way, I have the Onan Engine Service Manual for the P216,  P218, P220, and P224 engines.  On the p224, the intake valve clearance (stem to guide) is 0.0010 min and 0.0025 max.  On the exhaust, the values are 0.0025 min and 0.0040 max. 

The manual calls out this procedure to test the electronic control module:  Connect positive volt meter lead to negative (larger diameter terminal) of coil.  Then connect negative lead of volt meter to ground.  Turn the key on and rotate the flywheel slowly by hand (remove spark plugs first).  Voltage should switch between battery voltage and 1 - 1.5 volts for each revolution.  If it does not switch properly, replace the module.  Is the electronic control module an always bad or always good sensor or can it act intermittently?  

The only other electronic circuit item that could kill the spark appears to be the oil pressure sensor.  According to my wiring diagram, if oil pressure sensor (normally open) closes, it grounds out the ignition circuit.  Is it possible that the sensor is malfunctioning or fluttering?  The service manual says to connect a jumper form positive battery terminal to positive coil terminal (smaller diameter terminal post).  If spark occurs when cranking the engine but not otherwise, then problem is low pressure cut out switch or true low pressure in the oil system.  If no spark occurs then the ignition module should be checked as noted above. 

I also noted that the head gasket is leaking (bubbles when running).  I should replace that and will do so unless the backfiring is damaging the head gasket.  If that is the case, then I will need to solve that issue first.  Any suggestions are welcome..........Doug

Minnesota_boy

Yes the electronic control module can be intermittent.  I had one that way on  a pickup truck.  It tried to get me to walk a few times before I replaced it.  Mine would open circuit when it got hot, usually on my way home after a long day (warm weather) when I didn't really want to walk.  Open the hood for a few minutes and relax, it would fire up and take me the rest of the way home.
I eat a high-fiber diet.  Lots of sawdust!

jpgreen

Good info there Doug.

Hey- what's the valve specs on the P216, and if you don't mind what do they show for the adjustment proceedure?

AND welcome to SawDust Heaven..!  8)
-95 Wood-Mizer LT40HD 27 Hp Kawasaki water cooled engine-

VA-Sawyer

Note:  I have solved this problem, but the answer came from waaaayyyy out in left field. I will post the problem and my troubleshooting results in this post. I'll give you all a couple of days to try and figure it out, then I will post the answer.  Believe me..... the solution will knock your socks off.  The only member on this board I think might figure this one out is Sparks,  and only because he may have experienced it before.

I got one for all you troubleshooters.... Last Thursday my engine started really running like cr@p when sawing. It sounded like the coil was breaking down and losing spark. It would throw a white cloud of unburnt fuel out the exhaust and make noise like someone was banging on it with a hammer. As soon as I stopped the foward travel the engine ran fine again. To be honest it was a scary thing to experience.
I changed the fuel....same problem.  I checked the compression, 125 psi cranking the starter with the throttle open, 90 psi cranking with the throttle closed. Left and right cylinders match pressure within a few psi. My maintenance logs confirm the numbers to be normal. There is metallic spatter buildup on the spark plugs, indicating either pre-ignition or heavy detonation. That agrees with the  scary hammer like noises I heard while sawing. I have an inspection light for looking in cylinders through the spark plug hole. It doesn't show any damage to the valves, pistons or cylinders.  The engine turns over smoothly by hand and the oil doesn't show any metalflake. Ignition timing is found to be good.  Mechanically, the engine is in proper shape.
After cleaning the junk off the plugs and putting everything back together again, I fire it up. It does start easier and idle smoother, but that isn't any suprise considering the condition of the plugs.
While it is running at idle , I put the FWD/REV switch in FWD and the engine develops a rough idle as soon as I start to move the head. I put it in REV and the idle is smooth. I raise and lower the head to see if it has any effect on the smoothness of the idle...no effect, other than a slight drop in idle speed due to the altenator loading up from the electrical load. The slight RPM drop during an electrical load is normal, but the roughness when I drop it in FWD is not. A little more checking shows me than I can make it run even rougher if I try to hold the head from moving in the FWD direction. Doing the same thing in REV does not cause it to run rough. I turn on everything electrical I can...debarker, lights, run the head UP and Down....engines stays smooth. Put it in FWD with minimum electrical load and start moving the speed knob...engine goes rough.
One last bit of info... the FWD/REV runs the head back and forth just fine when the engine is off.


You now have all the info that I had when the light bulb in my head lit up.
Good Luck,
VA-Sawyer

scsmith42

Doug - Exfarmer - Great posts and welcome to the forum!

Doug - does your manual show a specification for "valve lash" - ie the clearance between the valve stem and the rocker arm?  JPGreen - I believe that the valve "lash" is the spec that you're looking for - not the stem to guide clearance.

The valve stem to guide clearlance is typically only referenced on a rebuild, and it represents the wear that occurs on the valve stem and guide.  The only way to change the stem to guide clearance is to replace the guides, valves, knurl the guides or install some type of guide insert.

Excessive stem to guide clearnance will result in increased oil consumption, and reduced compression.  Way excessive clearnance can lead to a dropped valve (broken valve head - very bad!).

Scott
Peterson 10" WPF with 65' of track
Smith - Gallagher dedicated slabber
Tom's 3638D Baker band mill
and a mix of log handling heavy equipment.

ARKANSAWYER


  VA-Sawyer   Drum switch is bad.
ARKANSAWYER

VA-Sawyer

Sorry, Arky...Not the Drum Switch, but at least you are thinking far enough outside the box to possibly get it.
The FWD/REV system works ok. There is no chain binding, no problem with the belts or pulleys, and it seems to be traveling at normal speed in full foward or reverse. The ampmeter shows normal draw.
The main symptom is the ignition seems to break down when the FWD/REV switch is in FWD and seems to get worse as the feed motor needs more power.
VA-Sawyer

amberwood

coming in at a late stage here but this sounds very much like the voltage is dropping too low for the coil as the extra load is applied. Battery conditon? Alternator output?

DTR
MS460 Magnum
MS250
DAF CF85-430
ASV RC-85 track loader

VA-Sawyer

DTR,

That was one of my first thoughts, but pulling the heavist electrical load I could, debarker, lights, up/down motor raising the head etc, did not cause a rough idle.  A voltmeter on the + terminal of the coil shows better than 12 volts DC even while the idle gets rough when putting it in FWD.

VA-Sawyer

jpgreen

Something is grounding out intermittently when you go in forward feed.

What is it?
-95 Wood-Mizer LT40HD 27 Hp Kawasaki water cooled engine-

jpgreen

-95 Wood-Mizer LT40HD 27 Hp Kawasaki water cooled engine-

jpgreen

Does the problem happen only when the debarker is on?, or when it's off as well?
-95 Wood-Mizer LT40HD 27 Hp Kawasaki water cooled engine-

VA-Sawyer

Debarker has no effect on the problem. 

I suspected the keyswitch at one point. As I noted in my previous post, 12V DC at the coil + terminal doesn't change with the problem.

sparks

If this mill was built between 1992 and 1995 and it has the original power feed circuit board you could be shuting down the ignition system. The old style board would have one of the caps go bad which caused the board to bleed off current effecting the coil. As you increase the potentiometer the engine would begin to missfire. You would not see it in reverse because it is not controlled by the board.   Thanks
\"America will never be destroyed from the outside. If we falter and lose our freedoms, it will be because we destroyed ourselves.\" Abraham Lincoln

VA-Sawyer

Sparks,
Excellent !  Actually the mill is an '88 and I don't know if the board is original. I reached a point in the troubleshooting where I was convinced the power feed circuit board was causing the problem. I put my voltmeter back on the + terminal of the coil only this time I had it set on AC volts. With the engine not running and the key switch in the on position, I would get almost 2 volts of AC feedback when I put the FWD/REV switch in FWD.  Opened the speed control and found a loose solder joint on a capacitor. Re soldered the joint and fixed the problem.


OK Folks, here is what was happening... Because of the loose solder joint the capacitor was unable to do its job of filtering the AC feedback. The electronic ignition system was seeing this AC voltage and was false triggering the coil. When the coil is firing sparks at random times, the engine doesn't run very well. Also, these improperly timed sparks would sometimes happen as the piston was going up on compression causing the detonation I could hear and see the results of on the plugs.
So, there you have it. A very sick running engine caused by a bad circuit board that isn't part of the engine and is in fact, located some 3 feet away from the engine.  Go Figure !
VA-Sawyer

sawguy21

I have been anxiously awaiting the punch line. :D :D :D :D All that over a poorly soldered connection. Sheesh. Electrical problems can drive a good man nuts.
old age and treachery will always overcome youth and enthusiasm

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