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jrtrebor


Location: Michigan - 3 hours north of Chicago on the lake
Joined: Feb 10, 2010
Points: 539

Inside an R-Tek engine
Original Message   Feb 15, 2012 6:05 pm
Well I got the bolt stud welded, new old flywheel on, air gap set, good spark.  Put everything else back on the engine.
Still don't have the gov. vane so I just used the spring to keep the throttle at the idle position and used the idle screw
to bump up the idle up a little.  Put the engine back in the housing and it start on the third pull.
Was idling and running well, then I heard a knock, couple seconds later heard another one then another one.
So I shut it down.  Was one of those sounds you know isn't good, kind of a deep sounding clank.
It only made the sound maybe 3-4 times in about 20 maybe 30 seconds or run time.
Pull the engine back out and decided to take it apart to check the rod cap.
When I took the flywheel back off found that the new key I put in was sheared.
( could have had something to do with the knock)
Was really clean inside.



Intake port I believe



Exhaust port.  The two ports on the side run down into the crankcase.  Which is up in the photo.



Rod end on crank. You can see the roller bearings
Rod cap was tight.




Roller bearings in the cap.  Most of them stayed in place when I lifted it off.




I decided to put in the old crank I had from another R-Tek.  Same part numbers.
I put a few drops of oil on the crank journal so the bearings would stay in place.
There is enough space for one more bearing, but that's all that came out.
I guess once they all get spaced that's the way it should be.




A few photos of the difference between the two cranks.  Same part numbers.
Top one is the older one out of a CCR2400
The ends of the counter weights are clipped off on the newer crank. (bottom photo)
and the casting itself is a lot rougher.




New crank on the left.  If I remember to I'd like to weight them both.




Just for comparison.  Honda 11Hp crank on top.




Key way slot on the replacement crank.
Things were going well until I cracked a ring.  Hate when that happens.  There is an alignment pin in the
piston ring groove for both rings.  It keeps the end gap space of both of them aligned right above each other.  Which normally you don't do.
Unfortunately I didn't see the pins at first, pushed on the ring when it was on top of the pin not aligned in the end gap and.... snap.





This message was modified Feb 15, 2012 by jrtrebor
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jrtrebor


Location: Michigan - 3 hours north of Chicago on the lake
Joined: Feb 10, 2010
Points: 539

Re: Inside an R-Tek engine
Reply #4   Feb 15, 2012 10:06 pm
borat - After I saw the pins I figured they were to keep the rings from spinning and getting caught.  But I was a little surprised that they were both in the same location on the piston. 
Lining up both the ring gaps.  I would have thought that they would put them on opposite sides of the piston.

The lobe does look a little tweaked.  But it could be lenses distortion from being so close.  I may take it by a machinist friend and have him put it on lathe and see if that shows anything.
The main bearings felt and looked fine.  I did not count the bearings.  But will tomorrow.

But I agree I think that crank just isn't right.  The close up below shows better how the casting and machining was not even on the one side of the counter weight lobe. 
There were also strange marks on the edges of the lobes.   No evidence on the piston skirt or anywhere in the crankcase of the lobes rubbing or hitting.
I'm also beginning to wonder if the taper angle on the crank end is incorrect.  Not allowing full contact of the flywheel hub with the crank taper surface.
That would not only allow the flywheel to slip or spin on the crank.  But it might also allow it to wobble.  At this point I think the engine had a defective crank from the factory.
Bad machining.
This engine could not have been run very long.  There is no carbon or heat discoloration anywhere in the engine, none, even the plug looks hardy used.


This message was modified Feb 15, 2012 by jrtrebor
jrtrebor


Location: Michigan - 3 hours north of Chicago on the lake
Joined: Feb 10, 2010
Points: 539

Re: Inside an R-Tek engine
Reply #5   Feb 15, 2012 10:14 pm
MN_Runner wrote:
jrtrebor et al.

Trust you guys are doing this as a hobby and main passion but not a primary source of income.  You guys put so much love and passion to your snowblower project, it is painful to watch when you run into a problem such as this.  If you can't fix it then no one can.  I enjoy restoring bicycles (not the motorized kind) so I know how much fun it can be as well as a pain in the neck on an occasion.


I do it as a source of additional income.  But mostly because I just enjoy it.  I also like the challenge of solving some of the problems.  And trying to determine the causes. 
Building a better mouse trap is always a theme as well.  Finding a better way to do something.  And of course, I love tools.
RedOctobyr


Location: Lowell area, MA
Joined: Nov 5, 2011
Points: 282

Re: Inside an R-Tek engine
Reply #6   Feb 15, 2012 10:38 pm
To check the fit of the old flywheel to the new engine you could using something like bluing. Put it on the crankshaft's taper, say, then put the flywheel on. Maybe rotate the flywheel a bit against the crank. Then take it off and see if the blue from the crankshaft is covering the entire taper of the flywheel. I'm sure there's some way to accomplish the same thing (checking for contact) without having to actually buy a specific product just for this.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Engineer%27s_blue
trouts2




Location: Marlboro MA
Joined: Dec 8, 2007
Points: 1328

Re: Inside an R-Tek engine
Reply #7   Feb 16, 2012 9:01 am

Jrtrebor,

   Opened up my first two stroke a couple of months ago to get familiar with them and did snapped the ring in the same way not noticing the groove position hump. 

    I looked up all CCR models using the 141cc across a few years of each model run and all have drawings list the same 801220 crank. 

   Your finding the physically different lob indicates that the drawings are not correct and for a model run there may be unaccounted for differences at lest with the online parts lists. 

   Other than this mysterious crank it looks like Toro is getting it’s hp bumps from rpm bumps.   For the HSK850 it gets a bit more fuzzy as many different makers used that engine from 4 to 7hp.  There are a lot of pulley arrangements which cause crank bumps of the part numbers so hard track across engines.  There is variation in the governor spring so overall it looks for Tecumseh HSK850’s the changes from 4-7hp are probably only rpm changes also with different governor springs.

   On the 141cc it looks like the vane and spring are the same from early 4hp 2400’s up to your 2010 6.5hp.  They’re probably just spec’ing the governor spring arm to be bent for the rpm boost.

The rpm hp progression:

R*Tec

CCR2400   3950 4hp

CCR2450   4050 4.5hp

CCR3000   4150 6hp

CCR3650   4250 6.5hp

HSK850

CCR2400 3850 4hp

CCR2500 3850 5hp

SS722EC  3950 7hp (Ariens value but not a min-max like the others and probably +- 150 bringing the 7hp to possible 4200 which makes sense).

  In the past I thought that mufflers, carbs, possibly heads, ports, bores, pistons and rings were the cause of hp bumps.  It’s looking like on the 141cc and 139cc engines over the years it’s basically adjusting the rpms for the boost. 

   It would be interesting to know just how much weight difference there was between your cranks.  For a while I was weighting 8hp, 7hp and 5hp cranks on rebuilds.  I found differences in similarly hp engines.  Some differences were due to 3/4 vs 1 inch cranks but some were lob differences.  The lighter cranks were in lesser maker engines (all Tecumseh) so I thought it might be do cost cutting but never sure.
borat


Joined: Nov 10, 2007
Points: 2692

Re: Inside an R-Tek engine
Reply #8   Feb 16, 2012 9:29 am
MNRunner: 

I've been a motorhead all of my life.  I've never charged anyone a cent for fixing something for them.  I do it because, as JRT says, we enjoy the challenge of fixing something, especially at no cost to either myself or the owner.  More often than not, I can.  Occasionally money might be spent but judiciously. 

I recall fixing a non-starting snow blower for a friend's sister.  It was a very old Craftsman from the early 70's not in the greatest shape.  It was the first snow storm of the year.   My buddy and I drove over to the sister's house and on the way, he was explaining to me that HE had recommended a "friend of the family" mechanic to go over the snow blower for her only a month or so earlier.   So I fix it in a few minutes (dirt in float bowl and auger shear pins broken).   As we were driving home, he told me that he was very disappointed that we had to fix the snow blower because his sister had just shelled out ........  $480.00 for repairs!!!!   I was dumbfounded.   I told him the machine isn't worth $150.00, why would she pay him that much to fix it?   "Friend of the family", pay the bill.  That's absolute b.s.  If he were a friend, he wouldn't be sticking it to the guy's sister.  Would he?  And, it's not like she's got tons of money being a single mom working a low paying, menial job. 

It's rewarding  to help people, usually friends and relatives, to save them a few bucks and often a lot of bucks.  As we are all aware, 90% of stuff that doesn't work needs a very simple fix.  Usually fuel related, which is often caused by negligence. 

JRT: 

I agree, that the ring  retainer pins should be offset at least an inch or so.  You'd think that having both joints in the same location would allow a bit of blow-by.   Obviously hardly enough to matter.   The pins on my Yamaha pistons are spread a good inch and a half apart. 

It's hard to tell by looking at pictures but, that crank has to be defective.  Spinning it up on a lathe should show imbalance.  I'd also check it with a dial indicator to see if it's warped.  I suspect that the new crank will solve the problem.  Too bad about the broken ring.  I hate when a $2.00 part holds up a project.
RedOctobyr


Location: Lowell area, MA
Joined: Nov 5, 2011
Points: 282

Re: Inside an R-Tek engine
Reply #9   Feb 16, 2012 9:46 am
Can you spin up a crank on a lathe to check for imbalance, though? I'd expect the crank, by itself, *should* not be balanced, since isn't it also trying to help reduce the imbalance due to the connecting rod and piston going back and forth? If the crank itself were balanced, then there's nothing to help counteract the conrod & piston. I would agree on using a dial indicator to check for runout, at least.

Now I'm curious- would you consider buying a new crank for the engine? If I could confirm that the crank is *definitely* bad, then I might consider that. But it also needs a flywheel. Barring some really cheap source for those, I will admit I, personally, might consider the engine too far gone (but I've also never had to do that kind of major surgery on an engine). Based on what I saw for Tecumseh crank pricing, a new one could be ~$70 or so, plus a flywheel, maybe at a similar price? I wouldn't pay those prices to try and resurrect it, unless I could be sure those would do it, and I could definitely sell the machine for more. But that's just me. Of course, a similar, inexpensive machine that got backed into, but still has a good engine, could be a nice source for parts.

Thus far I've primarily just fixed machines for me. Some for family. Not 'cause I'm unwilling to do it for friends, just haven't really been asked. I've fixed plenty of computers for friends & family. There is something fun about getting a device working properly again. And it's nice when it turns out to be just bad gas or something similarly straightforward.
jrtrebor


Location: Michigan - 3 hours north of Chicago on the lake
Joined: Feb 10, 2010
Points: 539

Re: Inside an R-Tek engine
Reply #10   Feb 16, 2012 10:02 am
trouts2 - I agree, Bumping up the RPM on these engines does seem to be the only difference I've been able to find that explains the increase in HP. 
And as borat's video clearly showed.  Higher RPM does make a difference the blowers performance.  Glad to hear I'm not the only one who has made the
mistake with the ring.  Bugs me when I do things like that, but sometimes that's how you learn.  Trial and error.  Don't mind the trials, don't like the errors.

borat - I always amazes me what some people end up paying for repairs.  As you said most problems are fuel / carb. related and not a big deal.
Other issues are simple part swap fixes.  I love being able to fix things for someone and feel fortunate to have the knowledge and ability to be able to do so.
Been working on all kinds of things for many years.  Guess that is why I kind of enjoy trying to figuring out things like the problems with this engine.
It's a challenge, unlike a lot of other no-brainer repairs.

I just ran across an ad on CL where a guy is selling his Toro 3650 because it needs a new flywheel.  Hmmmm,  Maybe there is a problem Toro isn't talking
much about.  Thought this was curious as well.  Note:  On page 32 of the R-tek engine manual, it states:  " NOTE: Replace crankshaft and/or flywheel if keyway is distorted or cracked in any way." 

I looked and the B&S engine manual link you posted (thank you).  Read that the crank / rod needle bearing count is 33.  You were close.
I know, it's usually not the cost of the part it's the delay.  Although the rings are going to cost me about $20.00 unless I can find a junk engine somewhere.
Either way, it's money well spent if I can get things running correctly again, the blowers in great shape.
jrtrebor


Location: Michigan - 3 hours north of Chicago on the lake
Joined: Feb 10, 2010
Points: 539

Re: Inside an R-Tek engine
Reply #11   Feb 16, 2012 10:25 am
RedOctobyr wrote:
Now I'm curious- would you consider buying a new crank for the engine? If I could confirm that the crank is *definitely* bad, then I might consider that. But it also needs a flywheel. Barring some really cheap source for those,
Well actually I did have a crankshaft and flywheel from another R-Tek.  It was in a CCR2400 that I parted out.
 I sold a few parts (carb, ign. coil) to get back what I had paid for the blower and make a little.  Then kept the rest for spare parts.  I don't do a whole lot of repairs on other people's blowers
I mainly buy used blowers.  Repair them for resale, or keep and upgrade / replace my personal use blowers.  This 210R will be a big upgrade, it will replace my CCR2450.
I'll be going from a 2001 model year blower to a 2010 model.  I'll probably ask $200.00 for the 2450 but will take less (considering the lack of snow winter we've had).
Only have $25.00 in the 2450 and a few hours time.  I'll probably have about $65.00 total in the 210R barring any other problems. 
So doing the math, the 2010 Toro 210R will cost me nothing. And I'll have made $110.00 for the time I spent in both blowers. 
jrtrebor


Location: Michigan - 3 hours north of Chicago on the lake
Joined: Feb 10, 2010
Points: 539

Re: Inside an R-Tek engine
Reply #12   Feb 16, 2012 11:00 am
Another thing that just dawned on me about this Toro.  I got all of the manuals for the blower.  And it states  the it has a "2 year full coverage warranty". 
The sticker on the engine has a manufacture date of 04/2010.  So the blower is no more than 1 year 10 month old.
Wonder why the previous owner didn't take it in for a warranty repair?  Never owned a new blower so have no idea how that works.

But if Toro knows they have a problem with bad cranks and or flywheels maybe they just replace the entire blower.
And the owners are told they can just keep the old ones if they choose to.  I have no idea.
RedOctobyr


Location: Lowell area, MA
Joined: Nov 5, 2011
Points: 282

Re: Inside an R-Tek engine
Reply #13   Feb 16, 2012 12:58 pm
As nice as it would be of Toro to let people keep an old one, I have to expect they wouldn't want to do that. There must be better things they can do than give out additional free machines to the market, while leaving the old ones to be re-sold or something. When Cash For Clunkers happened, you didn't get to keep your old car This would have been Blowers For Broken.
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