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803 Bogs Down and dies at 85% Load

USAMilRet

Member
390
15
18
Location
Tampa, Florida
Fuel pressure is 7.9 PSI measured at the connection at the electric fuel pump at start and after start.

Oil sending unit shows 240 ohm as needed when shut down but when the engine is started and allowed to run, the resistance only drops to 200 ohms not to the 100 to 33 ohms level indicated in the manual. However, this does not mean that the sender unit is bad IF the oil pressure from the engine is only 5 to 8 PSI. So how do I find out the real oil pressure? If the oil pressure is really that low, it has to be adjusted at the pump inside the crank case. Further testing needed.....

The fuel solenoid is bad. It will only retract now if helped. Once deenergized, it has to be helped again to retract. While in the retract position, it moves a little and will not hold position. So this need to be replaced. Part number and source availability?
 

jamawieb

Well-known member
1,435
557
113
Location
Ripley/TN
What about the fuel pressure when the unit gets hot and shuts down?

Hook a manual, oil pressure gauge to the line that leads up to the oil pressure sending unit. That way you will know for sure.
 

USAMilRet

Member
390
15
18
Location
Tampa, Florida
need more info. was this at idle? engine temp? new known oil? did the pressure suddenly drop to 7 or has it always been? you used a mechanical gauge to check?
Yes at idle. Just started ambient temp oil in crankcase. When engine was rebuilt in Dec 17, about 11 hours ago. Yes. Yesterday the genset was running at 20psi to 22 psi. Then while under load at 60% and after 15 or so minutes, there was a lot of smoke then black smoke and the genset bogged down and I heard a knock knock knock like a bad rod (engine runs OK today - no load though) and hit the emergency shutdown. While reviewing a tape of what happened about 2 minutes before this I saw that the genset was also near 220 deg F on the water.

I will try to attach the video but I have not done this before.
 

justacitizen

Active member
408
40
28
Location
oklahoma
so at operating temp and rpm you have 20 psi and at idle cold you have 7 psi? or does the oil pressure start out at 20 and drop to 7 when the engine warms to operating temp and 1800rpm? i would bet that there is no thermostat installed. if i were you i would change the oil to a known spec 15w40 and filters and start over.
 
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USAMilRet

Member
390
15
18
Location
Tampa, Florida
No. Yesterday :-* had 20 to 22 psi oil. After the emergency shutdown it sat overnight. Today the oil psi is 7 psi. Yesterday when I did the emergency shutdown the oil fault indicator was lit. It also looked like the genset was beginning to overheat.
 

justacitizen

Active member
408
40
28
Location
oklahoma
i would not run it again until i changed the oil. and then with fresh oil and filter if it still carries 7 psi cold i would shut it down immediately and take corrective action. i forgot about the knocking noise. you may want to turn the engine by hand to feel for a loose rod. it is possible you have a bearing cap coming off or have a spun bearing. another poss is crank the engine with the dead crank to listen before you start it.
 
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Daybreak

2 Star Admiral
Steel Soldiers Supporter
1,522
771
113
Location
Va
Howdy,
Some of your answers are too short.

Rebuild = rebuilt by the guy you bought the unit from. (does he know what he's doing?)
How much of a rebuild was done? Why did that person rebuild it?

Was a new hour meter installed by the guy that did this rebuild?

Note:
John Deere break-in oil is not a golden honey color oil. The break-in oil is a dark hue with a greenish tint to it.

Add-on
after watching your video. I would ask what does the exhaust smell like? Are the rings correctly installed. Is the unit running on oil.
 
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USAMilRet

Member
390
15
18
Location
Tampa, Florida
Howdy,
Some of your answers are too short.

Rebuild = rebuilt by the guy you bought the unit from. (does he know what he's doing?)
How much of a rebuild was done? Why did that person rebuild it?

Was this unit ever reset with the military? Letter-Kenny reset plate?

Was a new hour meter installed by the guy that did this rebuild?

Note:
John Deere break-in oil is not a golden honey color oil. The break-in oil is a dark hue with a greenish tint to it.
The engine was rebuilt by the individual I bought it from. He has been overhauling and reselling MEPs for around 10 years. Has an established website and is highly spoken of from the reviews I have seen.

Yes, he put the new hour meter in it.

No resets indicated. No Letterkenney data plate. It is a 2009 and has most if not all of the TIER updates that I know of.

My understanding is that they rebuilt the lower half but sent the upper half out for the work. I will find out exactly what was replaced/done.
 

USAMilRet

Member
390
15
18
Location
Tampa, Florida
It was a 218 hour engine that he choose to rebuild because he heard a knock in the lower part of the engine during the final testing phase.

Was not sure what it was but wanted me to have a solid engine so it was rebuilt.
 

jamawieb

Well-known member
1,435
557
113
Location
Ripley/TN
http://www.powerspareparts.com/sear...a-fuel-stop-solenoid-sa-3865-5945-01-378-7172

For your fuel cutoff solenoid.

If he truly rebuilt the motor, you should have a higher oil pressure than 20-22psi. Should be around 60psi. You may want to take the oil fill cap off while its running to see if its pushing a lot of oil out of there. You will have a little spray coming out from pressure but it shouldn't be bad. If it is bad, then most likely the rings are not set right or a piston ring has broken. The rings have to be installed a certain way and they have to be staggered where they come together.
 

Guyfang

Moderator
Staff member
Moderator
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Burgkunstadt, Germany
Start the set. Pull the dipstick. Hold a small piece of paper over the hole. The engine SHOULD run with a vacuum on the crankcase. If the paper is not sucked down towards the hole, you have a problem.
 
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