DieselBound
Elite Member
I had an issue (quite similar) with my B7800. I was really busy at the time and didn't have time to really look into it. A neighbor wanted to use it and another neighbor volunteered to trouble-shoot it. Once I was freed of my other distractions, after the one neighbor was unsuccessful in his diagnosis, I rolled my sleeves up... A fuse that I'd looked at and looked fine turned out to be, using, drum roll, a proper diagnostic tool (and ohm meter), in fact, bad. This is the only time that I've ever encountered a visually OK-looking fuse to be bad. Many a time a person can bruise their forehead on low-hanging fruit!
Also, electrical connections can readily become corroded (in ways that it's almost impossible to detect w/o intense diagnostics or methodically pulling things apart and checking [but keep in mind that what looks fine isn't always FINE <- refer to my above fuse story]). Had this occur on a generator. Generator is an older unit that I had done a lot on to get it reliable, and then one day it wouldn't spin the starter (prior to this event I'd even pulled that starter and cleaned and lubed it!). There's a lot of electrical stuff going on with generators. One can find oneself staring at a lot of intimidating looking stuff. Armed with a schematic and with some help from an online forum (SmokeStak.com is an excellent source for older engines and such!) I tracked down the problem to a poor connection on a relay. Went through all the connections I could and now it's all good; it's something that I should have done from the get-go, after first getting the generator. Just plain good advice for when getting ANY piece of used equipment: sigh, and for even NEW stuff (a new flail tried to self-destruct when an under-torqued bolt came loose).
Also, electrical connections can readily become corroded (in ways that it's almost impossible to detect w/o intense diagnostics or methodically pulling things apart and checking [but keep in mind that what looks fine isn't always FINE <- refer to my above fuse story]). Had this occur on a generator. Generator is an older unit that I had done a lot on to get it reliable, and then one day it wouldn't spin the starter (prior to this event I'd even pulled that starter and cleaned and lubed it!). There's a lot of electrical stuff going on with generators. One can find oneself staring at a lot of intimidating looking stuff. Armed with a schematic and with some help from an online forum (SmokeStak.com is an excellent source for older engines and such!) I tracked down the problem to a poor connection on a relay. Went through all the connections I could and now it's all good; it's something that I should have done from the get-go, after first getting the generator. Just plain good advice for when getting ANY piece of used equipment: sigh, and for even NEW stuff (a new flail tried to self-destruct when an under-torqued bolt came loose).