justin_o_guy2
Serious Thumper
   
Offline

What happened?
Posts: 55279
East Texas, 1/2 dallas/la.
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Hey Justin,hope it wasnt me that woke you...I dont sleep real good at night so i dont really think about when i reply...if so i apologize.
Of Course it's Your fault that I woke up. You don't have to type that hard, man. I mean, C'mon man. Well, you're a braver man than I. I have a few strict rules when I'm working on stuff. In no particular order ,absolutely nothing goes in the trash until it's done and running. If something isn't running I don't do anything other than work to solve that problem. It's too easy to accidentally do something that will also make it not run. And when they tell you to shut the motor off and rinse it off, No, if I get water in something that kills it I want to know where the water was going when it died.
When I was fixing copiers and talking to other techs I noticed how often they would be trying to figure it out and concoct some possible series of failures that would do that. It's nearly always one problem. I'm sure you know now how much ahead you would have been to get the solenoid and get it running before changing stuff. What you do have is a motor that spins over and no spark, right? If that is true, then I would pull the plug and secure it so it is grounded and should spark. That way you can spin it over without wearing on your battery and starter so hard And If you do something that gets your spark back, but it just doesn't Hit,you won't know it has spark, If the battery is needing charged it can spin over and not fire the plug.
Where can I go to see the wiring diagram? I let my Suzuki service manual go when I sold my first one. I'll never do That again.
Make it dependable, when you strap a plug to the motor, make it solid. If you have to wrap baling wire around the threads and run it under a bolt if you have to, but it's Not cool to be wondering. If you have a known good plug and solder to the threads, and there is no rule against taking the plug and plugging it into a mower and proving the plug is good.
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