midwest
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Dec 28, 2021
- Posts
- 185
- Reaction score
- 200
- Location
- Indiana
- First Name
- Scott
- Truck Year
- 1986
- Truck Model
- K20
- Engine Size
- 350
I'm not real mechanically inclined.....(Just needed to get that out there).
I have a Ferris 61 inch ZTR mower with a 30 horse Briggs engine. Last week I was pulling my sprayer and was only running about half throttle. Right before I parked it the motor started to bog down like it was running on 1 cylinder. I revved it up and it smoothed out and I didn't think anything of it. Today I started mowing and about an hour in it did the same thing, bogged down. I pulled the spark plugs and one looked bad so I replaced both and it started right up so i thought that was it. Once it ran for 20 minutes same thing. I shut it off and checked the temps on both sides of the engine exhaust. The left side was only 150 degrees and right side was around 500 so I figured which one wasn't firing. I checked compression in both sides and they were both over 130 lbs. After it cooled off it started it runs smooth. This time I let it run until it bogged again. I checked the temps on both heads and the left head was over 900 degrees and the right head is just under 600. So I assumed the left side is overheating and causing a valve to stick???? I also "hoped" that I would remove the shroud and find a mouse nest of a bunch of grass in there blocking the air flow. The fins on the head were pretty clean. That's about the extent of my mechanical knowledge... Any ideas on what to check next? I have no idea what could be happening inside the engine that would cause one side to overheat. I am not sure if the over heating is causing something else which shuts that cylinder down or if something is wrong inside that is causing it to overheat.
The mower is a 2014 and only has about 300 hours on it. Air filter is clean and I run Rotella T14 oil and briggs OEM filter. Its a Briggs Commercial Turf engine.
This morning I called the dealer I got the mower from. Their service department is 4 weeks out....The service guy said he guesses it is the coil. I could see the engine getting hot causing the coil to fail but could a failing coil cause that head to get hot?
I have a Ferris 61 inch ZTR mower with a 30 horse Briggs engine. Last week I was pulling my sprayer and was only running about half throttle. Right before I parked it the motor started to bog down like it was running on 1 cylinder. I revved it up and it smoothed out and I didn't think anything of it. Today I started mowing and about an hour in it did the same thing, bogged down. I pulled the spark plugs and one looked bad so I replaced both and it started right up so i thought that was it. Once it ran for 20 minutes same thing. I shut it off and checked the temps on both sides of the engine exhaust. The left side was only 150 degrees and right side was around 500 so I figured which one wasn't firing. I checked compression in both sides and they were both over 130 lbs. After it cooled off it started it runs smooth. This time I let it run until it bogged again. I checked the temps on both heads and the left head was over 900 degrees and the right head is just under 600. So I assumed the left side is overheating and causing a valve to stick???? I also "hoped" that I would remove the shroud and find a mouse nest of a bunch of grass in there blocking the air flow. The fins on the head were pretty clean. That's about the extent of my mechanical knowledge... Any ideas on what to check next? I have no idea what could be happening inside the engine that would cause one side to overheat. I am not sure if the over heating is causing something else which shuts that cylinder down or if something is wrong inside that is causing it to overheat.
The mower is a 2014 and only has about 300 hours on it. Air filter is clean and I run Rotella T14 oil and briggs OEM filter. Its a Briggs Commercial Turf engine.
This morning I called the dealer I got the mower from. Their service department is 4 weeks out....The service guy said he guesses it is the coil. I could see the engine getting hot causing the coil to fail but could a failing coil cause that head to get hot?