Semto ST-NF2 Engine Won't Start? How to Diagnose & Fix Low Compression | Stirlingkit

Semto ST-NF2 Engine Won't Start? How to Diagnose & Fix Low Compression | Stirlingkit

Semto ST-NF2 Engine Won't Start? How to Diagnose & Fix Low Compression | Stirlingkit
Troubleshooting Guide

ST-NF2 Engine Won't Start?
How to Diagnose & Fix Low Compression

Before assuming your engine is faulty, read this first. Miniature 4-stroke engines behave very differently from full-size ones — and what feels like "no compression" is often normal. This guide helps you test correctly, understand what you are seeing, and take the right action.

? Which version do you have?

The ST-NF2 comes in two versions. All compression diagnosis and valve repair steps in this guide apply to both. The cards below show where they differ.

🔩 Version A — Engine Kit
OTTO MOTOR FS-L200AC Engine Kit

OTTO MOTOR FS-L200AC
Fuel: Nitro — 20–25% nitromethane + methanol
Ignition: Glow plug + ignition module
Start: 7.4V LiPo battery (sold separately)
Power off: Unplug battery connector
Drain fuel: Disconnect fuel line, drain tank

⚡ Version B — Generator Set
ST-NF2 12V DC Generator Set

ST-NF2 12V DC Generator Set
Fuel: Gasoline mix — 92-octane : 2T oil at 25:1
Ignition: CDI + spark plug (Red 1 = trigger + resistor; Red 2 = ground/return)
Start: One-touch electric start; 3S LiPo included
Power off: Base switch off → unplug 3S battery
Drain fuel: Close fuel valve, drain with syringe

📌 Version B — one extra step before any disassembly
In addition to switching off and unplugging the battery, physically disconnect the voltage regulator and charging module connectors from the circuit board. The generator coil is mounted on the flywheel side and does not need to be removed for any valve work.

1 What "normal" compression actually feels like on this engine

This is the most important section to read before doing anything else. Misreading normal behaviour as a fault is the most common reason people think their ST-NF2 is broken when it is not.

⚠️ Do not judge this engine by car engine standards
The ST-NF2 has a bore of just 16.6 mm and a displacement of 3.5cc per cylinder. A typical car engine cylinder displaces around 400–500cc — roughly 100 times more. The compression feel scales accordingly. On this engine, "good compression" feels like a gentle but definite resistance, not a brick wall.
💡 What to expect straight out of the box
A brand-new ST-NF2 has piston rings, cylinder bore, and valve seats that have never been run in. The metal surfaces have microscopic irregularities and will not yet conform perfectly to each other. This means:

● The flywheel will feel relatively light to turn — this is normal
● A soap bubble test may show a slow, occasional bubble — this is normal
● The engine may need several start attempts before it catches — this is normal

All of these improve after proper break-in. The engine is not defective just because it does not feel like a car engine on day one.

The right question is not "does it have perfect compression?" but "does it have enough compression to fire?" The two tests below will tell you.


2 Step 1 — Run these two tests in order
1

Spark plug hole finger test — do this first

Start by removing the plug for your version:

Version A 🔩 Version A — Engine Kit
Remove the glow plug from the cylinder head.
Version B ⚡ Version B — Generator Set
Remove the spark plug from the cylinder head.

Press your fingertip firmly over the plug hole to seal it completely. With your other hand, slowly rotate the flywheel. As the piston rises on the compression stroke, you should feel a noticeable puff of air trying to push your finger away — even on a new engine this should be clearly felt.

Interpreting your result:

  • Clear, definite puff felt — compression is sufficient. Tuning or starting procedure issue, not mechanical. Go to Section 4.
  • ⚠️ Very faint pressure, barely noticeable — some compression present but low. Proceed to Test 2. Go to Section 3 → Path B.
  • Nothing felt at all — genuine compression loss. Proceed to Test 2 immediately. Go to Section 3 → Path C.
2

Soap bubble test — only if Test 1 showed weak or no compression

This test shows you where the air is escaping from.

  • Remove the rocker arms completely so the valves close under spring pressure alone. Leaving them in can hold a valve slightly open and give a false result.
  • Mix a small amount of dish soap with water
  • Brush the solution around the intake manifold inlet and the exhaust port outlet
  • Reinstall the spark plug / glow plug, then gently blow into the intake port

Interpreting your result:

  • No bubbles, or one slow bubble after 5+ seconds — minor seepage, normal for a new engine. Go to Section 5.
  • ⚠️ Small but steady stream of bubbles — moderate leakage. Valve lapping will likely fix this. Go to Section 6.
  • Continuous strong stream of bubbles immediately — severe sealing failure. Valve lapping required. Go to Section 6.

3 Step 2 — Choose your path

Match your test results below and jump to the right section.

✅ Path A — No issue

Compression is good

Finger test: clear puff felt
Soap test: no bubbles or near-zero

Your valves are sealing correctly. This is a tuning or starting procedure issue.

→ Go to Section 4

⚠️ Path B — New engine

Low compression — break-in first

Finger test: faint pressure
Soap test: slow or small bubbles

The engine needs break-in time. Do not attempt repairs yet.

→ Go to Section 5

❌ Path C — Repair needed

No compression — lapping required

Finger test: nothing felt
Soap test: strong continuous bubbles

Valve seats are not sealing. Must be fixed before the engine can run.

→ Go to Section 6


Know Your Ignition System Before You Troubleshoot

The two versions use completely different ignition systems. Confirm which one you have before checking anything else — the diagnosis steps are different for each.

🔩 Version A — Glow Plug Ignition
OTTO MOTOR FS-L200AC — Glow Plug Version

How it works: A 7.4V LiPo powers the ignition module, heating the glow plug filament to a bright orange glow. The hot filament ignites the nitro fuel on each compression stroke. Once the engine is running you can disconnect the battery.

Plug type: F-type 4-stroke glow plug only.

Good ignition: Filament glows bright orange within 2–3 seconds. Dull red or nothing = replace the plug.

If it fails: Replace the glow plug. Reset needle valves — main 2.0 turns out, auxiliary 1.5 turns out.

⚡ Version B — CDI Ignition
ST-NF2 Generator Set — CDI Ignition Version

How it works: The CDI fires a high-voltage spark through the spark plug on every compression stroke. A Hall Sensor reads a magnet on the flywheel to trigger the spark at exactly the right moment.

Wiring: New version uses two red wires only — Red 1 (trigger) and Red 2 (ground/return). No black ground wire. See the wiring detail below.

Good ignition: Hold plug against engine block and press start — CDI box light flashes and plug sparks simultaneously.

⚡ Version B only — CDI Wiring Detail

The new CDI system uses only two red wires. Many users mistake this for a wiring error — it is not. Here is exactly what each wire does:

Wire Role Critical note
Red 1 Trigger signal to Hall Sensor The resistor on this wire must stay installed. Removing it destroys the Hall Sensor instantly — no repair possible, replacement only.
Red 2 Negative / ground + spark plug return path There is no separate black ground wire on the new version. Red 2 handles both functions. This is intentional design, not a missing wire.
Hall Sensor Detects flywheel magnet position Must be positioned approximately 10 mm below the flywheel. Too close or too far causes misfiring or no spark.
⚠️ Most common mistake
Removing the resistor from Red 1 thinking it is unnecessary. This destroys the Hall Sensor. The majority of "CDI failure" reports are caused by this wiring error — not a broken CDI unit.

💡 Quick diagnostic
If the CDI box light flashes but no spark appears at the plug: check the Red 1 resistor is intact, confirm Red 2 is connected as ground/return, and verify the Hall Sensor is ~10 mm from the flywheel. Only replace the spark plug after ruling out all three.

→ Full CDI wiring guide with diagrams — new vs. old version comparison


4 Path A — Good compression: starting & tuning checklist

If compression is confirmed good but the engine still will not start, work through the checklist below in order.

What to check What good looks like What to do if it fails
Fuel delivery After priming, fuel should reach the carb throat. Briefly cover the air intake while cranking — the carb throat should be visibly wet with fuel. Check fuel line for kinks, blockages, or air leaks. On Version B, confirm the fuel valve is open.
Needle valve reset
Version A only
Version A 🔩 Version A — Engine Kit

Factory baseline: main needle 2.0 turns out from fully closed; auxiliary needle 1.5 turns out. A mis-adjusted needle is one of the most common causes of hard starting.
Reset both needles to the baseline and retry. Do not fine-tune until the engine starts and warms up.
Fuel mix
Version B only
Version B ⚡ Version B — Generator Set

92-octane gasoline mixed with 2T oil at 25:1 (40 ml of oil per 1 litre of fuel). Pure gasoline without oil will not lubricate the engine and may prevent starting.
Drain the tank and refill with a freshly measured 25:1 mix.
Throttle position Throttle at approximately 30% open for starting. Fully closed starves the engine; fully open floods it. Set to 30% and retry. If flooded, remove plug, crank briefly to clear fuel, reinstall and retry.
Timing belt Both cam pulley timing marks should align simultaneously at TDC. Re-align marks if belt has jumped a tooth. A jumped belt causes popping/backfire but no running.

5 Path B — Low compression: break-in procedure

A brand-new ST-NF2 with light compression and slow soap bubbles is behaving exactly as expected. The fix is not a repair — it is proper break-in.

💡 How long does break-in take?
Compression improves noticeably after 2 full tanks at low to medium throttle. By tank three the engine should idle consistently. No improvement after 2 tanks → move to Path C.
1

Use a slightly richer fuel mixture for the first two tanks

A richer mixture carries more oil through the engine, lubricating rings and valve stems while they seat in.

Version A 🔩 Version A — Engine Kit
Set the main needle to 2.5 turns out from fully closed — half a turn richer than the standard 2.0.
Version B ⚡ Version B — Generator Set
Mix at 20:1 for the first two tanks (50 ml of 2T oil per litre of 92-octane gasoline). Return to 25:1 from tank three onward.
2

Keep throttle below 50% for the entire first tank

High RPM before the rings have seated can glaze the cylinder bore and permanently reduce compression. Vary throttle between idle and 50% — no full throttle.

3

Allow the engine to cool fully between tanks

After each tank, shut down and allow to cool to room temperature — typically 15–20 minutes. Heat cycling helps metal parts gradually conform to each other.

4

Gradually increase throttle on tank two

Extend the upper range to around 70%. Brief bursts at higher throttle help seat the rings, but avoid sustained full throttle until break-in is complete.

5

Re-test compression after two tanks

Repeat the finger test and soap test from Section 2. In most cases the puff of air will be noticeably stronger and soap test will show little or no bubbling.

If compression has not improved at all after two full break-in tanks, move to Section 6 — valve lapping.


6 Path C — No compression: valve lapping
👋 Don't be put off by the name — this is simpler than it sounds
"Valve lapping" sounds like something that needs a workshop and special training. It doesn't. The whole process is just this: put a small amount of abrasive paste on a metal part, press it against its seat, and rotate it back and forth with your fingers for a few minutes. That's it.

No power tools. No engineering experience needed. The most delicate thing you will handle is a small spring clip — everything else is just screws and patience. Most people finish all four valves in under 30 minutes on their first attempt.

The steps below walk you through every part of it. Take it one step at a time and you will be fine.
💡 What you are actually trying to do
Picture a jar lid that doesn't quite seal — the rim isn't perfectly flat, so air sneaks out around the edge. Valve lapping is exactly like lapping the rim of that lid against the jar opening using a little fine paste until the two surfaces match perfectly and nothing can get through. Once they match, the valve seals completely and your engine gets the compression it needs to fire.
🛠️ What you need — all basic items, nothing specialist
🔧 Precision screwdriver set (Phillips + flat-head)
🟤 Fine valve lapping compound (320-grit or finer) — available at any hardware store, very cheap
🧴 Isopropyl alcohol — regular rubbing alcohol works fine
🧻 Lint-free cloths and cotton swabs
💧 High-temperature grease — any small tube from a hardware store
📦 A small tray or egg carton to keep tiny parts organised
⛔ Before you touch anything
Engine must be completely cool. Fuel tank must be empty. All power must be disconnected.
Version A 🔩 Version A — Engine Kit
Unplug the battery connector. Disconnect the fuel line and drain the fuel tank.
Version B ⚡ Version B — Generator Set
Switch off the base power switch. Unplug the 3S battery connector. Physically disconnect the voltage regulator and charging module from the circuit board.
1

Step 1 — Take off the valve cover

The valve cover is the flat panel on top of the engine, held down by 4 small screws. Loosen them a little at a time, working in a cross pattern (loosen one corner, then the opposite corner, then the other two) — this stops the cover from warping. Lift it straight off. You will now see the rocker arms and springs inside.

2

Step 2 — Remove the rocker arms

The rocker arms are the small lever-shaped pieces that push the valves open. Remove the screws holding the rocker shaft in place and slide the shaft out — the rocker arms will come free with it. Put a small piece of tape on each one and write "IN" or "EX" (intake or exhaust) so you know which is which when you put them back. They look similar but are not interchangeable.

3

Step 3 — Remove the cylinder head

Loosen the head screws a little at a time in a cross pattern — same as the cover. Once all screws are loose, lift the head straight up. Underneath you will find a thin paper or metal gasket. Set it aside carefully and check it — if it is torn or crushed in any spot, you will need a replacement before putting things back together. A damaged gasket will cause an air leak even after the valves are perfectly fixed. If it looks intact, just set it to one side.

4

Step 4 — Remove the valves (the fiddliest part — go slow)

Each valve is held in place by a spring and two tiny metal clips called keeper clips. This is the trickiest part of the whole process — not because it is difficult, just because the clips are very small.

Do this over your parts tray. Use tweezers to compress the spring slightly and slide the two keeper clips out sideways. The moment they come free the spring will release, so keep a finger over the area. Once the clips are out, the spring and valve lift straight out.

Keep each valve's parts together in a separate section of your tray. Do not mix intake and exhaust valves — they go back into the same holes they came from.

5

Step 5 — Clean the valve and its seat

Take the valve and look at the angled ring around its base — that is the seating surface that needs to seal. Now look inside the cylinder head at the matching angled ring where the valve sits — that is the valve seat.

Wipe both surfaces with alcohol on a lint-free cloth until they are completely clean and dry. Any oil or grease left on these surfaces will stop the lapping compound from working properly — so take an extra minute here to make sure both are spotless.

6

Step 6 — Lap the valve (the actual fix — easier than it looks)

Put a very thin smear of lapping compound around the angled face of the valve — about as much as you would put toothpaste on a toothbrush. Less is better. A thick blob just squeezes out to the sides and does nothing useful.

Drop the valve back into its seat in the cylinder head. Hold the stem between your thumb and index finger. Now just rotate it back and forth — half a turn one way, half a turn back — while pressing it gently but firmly down into the seat. It is a bit like grinding pepper: steady, gentle, back and forth.

Every 30 seconds or so, lift the valve out and look at the angled face. You are looking for a dull grey ring that runs continuously all the way around — no breaks, no shiny patches, just a consistent matte band about 0.5–1 mm wide. If the ring is uneven or has a gap somewhere, just put the valve back and keep going, rotating it a quarter turn before you restart so you work the whole surface.

Most valves are done in 2–5 minutes. You will be able to see and feel when the surface is becoming more even.

7

Step 7 — Clean off all the lapping compound (most important step)

This step matters more than any other. Lapping compound is an abrasive — it is designed to grind metal. If any of it is left on the valve, in the seat area, or anywhere nearby when you start the engine, it will grind away the piston rings and cylinder wall within minutes. That kind of damage cannot be repaired.

Wipe the valve face and seat with fresh alcohol-soaked cloths. Then wipe again. Use cotton swabs to clean the valve stem, the guide bore, and every corner around the seat. Keep going until you wipe across the surface with a clean white cloth and nothing grey comes off. That is when you know it is clean.

8

Step 8 — Check your work with the soap test

Before putting anything back together, do a quick check. Place the valve back in its seat by hand — just drop it in, no spring needed. Brush a little soap solution around the port opening and gently blow air in. If no bubbles appear, the valve is sealing — you are done with this one. Repeat for every valve before moving on to reassembly. This only takes a minute per valve and saves you from having to take everything apart again later.

9

Step 9 — Put the valves back in

Put a small amount of high-temperature grease on the valve stem — this is just to protect it on the first start before any fuel reaches it. Slide the valve back into its guide, fit the spring over the stem, compress the spring, and slide the two keeper clips back into their groove in the stem. Give the valve a gentle tug upward — if the keepers are seated properly, the valve will not pull out. If it does, compress the spring and reseat the clips.

10

Step 10 — Refit the cylinder head

Place the head gasket back in position — make sure it lines up with all the holes — then lower the cylinder head on top. Start every screw by hand before tightening any of them. Then tighten a little at a time in a cross pattern, the same way you loosened them. Firm is enough — do not go hard. Over-tightening strips the threads or crushes the gasket, which creates a new leak right where you just fixed one. Reference torque is 1.38 N·m for M3 screws if you have a torque screwdriver.

11

Step 11 — Refit the rocker arms and grease the camshaft

Before fitting the rocker arms, apply a good smear of high-temperature grease to the camshaft lobes (the oval-shaped bumps on the shaft) and to the curved pads on the rocker arms where they contact the cam. This is important: the ST-NF2 has no oil pump, so there is no automatic lubrication to these parts. The grease you apply right now is all they have for the first run. A generous smear here will protect the cam lobes for many hours of running. Slide the rocker shaft back in and tighten the retaining screws.

12

Step 12 — Check the valve clearance

With the rocker arms back in place and the engine completely cold, check the small gap between the tip of each rocker arm and the top of each valve stem. The target gap is 0.05–0.08 mm. If you have a feeler gauge, slide the 0.05 mm blade into the gap — it should pass through with just a little resistance.

If the gap is too large you will hear a ticking noise when running. If it is too small the valve cannot fully close — which means you would be right back to the leaking problem you just spent time fixing. If adjustment is needed, loosen the locknut on the rocker arm adjuster, turn the adjuster screw until the gap is right, then retighten the locknut.

13

Step 13 — Close everything up and test

Place the valve cover back on and tighten the screws in a cross pattern. Reinstall the spark plug or glow plug.

Now do the finger compression test one more time: plug the hole with your fingertip and slowly turn the flywheel. You should feel a clear, definite puff of air pushing against your finger. If you do — that is it. You fixed it. The engine now has the compression it needs to start and run.

✅ You will know it worked because...
The finger test gives you a clear, definite puff of air — not a faint suggestion of pressure, but something that actually pushes back against your finger. The soap test shows no bubbles. And when you start the engine, it fires and idles in a way it never did before. That feeling is the payoff for doing this properly.

7 Still not sealing after lapping?

If several rounds of lapping still produce an incomplete contact band, the issue is in the physical condition of the valve or seat — something hand lapping cannot correct.

What you observe Most likely cause Recommended action
Contact band always has a gap or is uneven despite extended lapping Valve seat is out-of-round or pitted — a machining defect that cannot be lapped out by hand Replace the valve. If the seat in the head is damaged, contact Stirlingkit.
Valve stem is visibly bent when rolled on a flat surface Manufacturing defect or damage during disassembly Replace the valve.
Valve seat in the cylinder head is cracked or deeply pitted Manufacturing defect in the casting Cylinder head needs replacement. Contact Stirlingkit for support.
💬 Contact us for further support
If you have worked through all the steps and the engine still will not run, email us at service@stirlingkit.com with your order number and a description of what you have tried. A short video of the finger test and the soap test helps us assess the situation quickly and arrange the right solution.

Looking for the complete start-up and wiring guides?

This guide covers compression diagnosis only. For CDI ignition wiring, carburetor adjustment, first-start procedure, and operating tips, visit the guides below.

CDI Ignition Wiring Guide → Full Engine Beginner Guide →
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