woodlandfarms
Super Member
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2006
- Messages
- 6,137
- Location
- Los Angeles / SW Washington
- Tractor
- PowerTrac 1850, Kubota RTV x900
Here is a new one.
The wife calls me, all in a tiz. Tractor died while mowing, Sounds like it is out of gas (diesel) but the gauge reads quarter full.
I get home, it is dark. Run the jerry can down the hill and put 5 gallons in. Crank a few times. starts up. Up the hill I go and the gauge reads half full. Today I run around on the machine in the rain and the temp is reading way hot. But the voltage is reading way low... like 12 volts. Up goes the hood, out comes the voltage meter. 14.4v. Now I think what could this be. Gauges are getting juice, but something is creating an odd reading between the gauges and the source. Back the tractor up and the gauges pop up to normal (temp goes down, gas goes down, oil goes down, voltage goes up. Pull the covers off the steering and start wiggling wires. Nothing. OK, gauges are good going to take off. Drop the hood, climb on. Gauges back to too high temps and pressure and to low voltage. What the heck... So I "tap" the gauge and bang, things go back to normal. Pull covers again and notice the clamping nuts that hold the gauge to the metal are only finger tight. So, a poor ground at the gauge caused all the issue.
Carl
The wife calls me, all in a tiz. Tractor died while mowing, Sounds like it is out of gas (diesel) but the gauge reads quarter full.
I get home, it is dark. Run the jerry can down the hill and put 5 gallons in. Crank a few times. starts up. Up the hill I go and the gauge reads half full. Today I run around on the machine in the rain and the temp is reading way hot. But the voltage is reading way low... like 12 volts. Up goes the hood, out comes the voltage meter. 14.4v. Now I think what could this be. Gauges are getting juice, but something is creating an odd reading between the gauges and the source. Back the tractor up and the gauges pop up to normal (temp goes down, gas goes down, oil goes down, voltage goes up. Pull the covers off the steering and start wiggling wires. Nothing. OK, gauges are good going to take off. Drop the hood, climb on. Gauges back to too high temps and pressure and to low voltage. What the heck... So I "tap" the gauge and bang, things go back to normal. Pull covers again and notice the clamping nuts that hold the gauge to the metal are only finger tight. So, a poor ground at the gauge caused all the issue.
Carl