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#1
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Hey there, I’m having some trouble getting my 1282 to start. When I got it had been sitting a few years, I purchased a new carb and I could get it to run, just not very well, until it just stopped all together. I have cleaned it, and tried to clean the original carb and no results either way. I have cleaned and set the points and it seems to have good spark. Even with spraying starter ether down the carb it still won’t do much except maybe firing once or twice.
I am not really sure where to go from here and some advice would be much appreciated. Thank you!
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Currently 1971 International Cub 1976 Cub Cadet 1000 1982 Cub Cadet 1282 And a few of other brands! |
#2
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So when you prime the carb and say it will fire but not run. Does that
mean it quits turning over. Or can you continue to crank with no start? Sounds like you have good spark. Are you sure you have good fuel flow to the carb and good compression? If you battery is suspect that will mess with you as well. Let us know what you find. Ken |
#3
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Timing is critical along with proper point gap(dwell). While hard to do with the ACR, proper compression is critical to starting these.
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![]() 582, 682, 782, 782D, 1282, 1050, 1210 x 2, 1711, and 1811 |
#4
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You may have washed down the cylinder walls by spraying either into it.
Not a good idea. Static time the engine first off, make sure you have a good clean flow of fuel as well as compression. |
#5
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I guess that making sure I have correct timing and compression would be the next step? “You may have washed down the cylinder walls by spraying either“ I have tried to use minimal ether to prevent that, however it could have drilled happened. Thank you all for the advice!
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Currently 1971 International Cub 1976 Cub Cadet 1000 1982 Cub Cadet 1282 And a few of other brands! |
#6
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Why Farm Half When You Can Farmall? 1282 | 44C Deck, Chains, 42" Blade, Cast Weights, 020" Over K301 * 1711 | 50C Deck, #1 Rear Rototiller w/ Extensions, Sleeve Hitch, KT17S Series II 24302 --> CH18S * 1811 | 46 GT Deck, 42" Blade, Chains, M18 Magnum, Sleeve Hitch * 1782 | 60" #375 Deck, Kubota D640 Diesel * 1862 | #450 Snowblower, M18 Magnum * 782 | Y/W KT17 Series II, Sleeve Hitch * 984 | Y/W Onan/Linamar 20HP, Sims Cab, CAT 0 3 PT w/ Rear PTO, 60" #374 Deck |
#7
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Alright, I finally got back on this project today. I got it to fire up and run for 15ish minutes. I replaced and set the points, and adjusted the carb as the manual says to do. I got it to run and it ran fairly good. However after it got warmed up it just died, no backfire and sputtering. The only way I could get it to run after that was with Carb Clean.
I’m going to try it tomorrow after it’s cooled down to see if it might start cold. I checked and it did have good fuel flow and spark after it quit. I would think if the gas was bad it wouldn’t have started in the first place.
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Currently 1971 International Cub 1976 Cub Cadet 1000 1982 Cub Cadet 1282 And a few of other brands! |
#8
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Just out of curiosity how much gas is in your tank? If I remember right the K series engines in the spread frame 82 series tractors have a tough time getting fuel down to the carb if the line has some up and down bends in it. The twin engines have the fuel pumps to prevent that issue and maybe this engine does too. Just something to check
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#9
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Anything less than a quarter tank of fuel requires a fuel pump in the 82 series. Anything above that, gravity will properly feed the engine.
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![]() 582, 682, 782, 782D, 1282, 1050, 1210 x 2, 1711, and 1811 |
#10
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Currently 1971 International Cub 1976 Cub Cadet 1000 1982 Cub Cadet 1282 And a few of other brands! |
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Cub Cadet is a premium line of outdoor power equipment, established in 1961 as part of International Harvester. During the 1960s, IH initiated an entirely new line of lawn and garden equipment aimed at the owners rural homes with large yards and private gardens. There were a wide variety of Cub Cadet branded and after-market attachments available; including mowers, blades, snow blowers, front loaders, plows, carts, etc. Cub Cadet advertising at that time harped on their thorough testing by "boys - acknowledged by many as the world's worst destructive force!". Cub Cadets became known for their dependability and rugged construction.
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