Dave M7040
Elite Member
- Joined
- Dec 10, 2012
- Messages
- 2,757
- Location
- Williamstown Ontario Canada
- Tractor
- Kubota M7040 Nuffield 465
OK the alternator is working properly and the regulator is also but it is not charging the battery..
There is a connector (under the dash) that I get 13.2 volts or so out of and 11 .whatever on the other side of it (battery voltage) when I check each side ..(unplugged of course )
There is also a small diode plugged into the wiring harness that I can find on any diagrams but it reads really odd on continuity on my meter ..I am not even sure what it is there for...It reads 0 in one direction and 50 in the other ..
any ideas befor I rip the wiring harness out and start over?
There are one or two diodes in many modern wiring harnesses.
They have nothing to do with the charging system.
They are there to drain off high voltages produced in solenoids and the like where there are coils of wire. Often called flyback diodes.
The magnetic field builds around the coils of wire (i.e. solenoid) and the magnetic field moves the metal part inside the coil. I read you are a Ham guy so some of this stuff is to inform others
When the current is shut off, the collapsing magnetic field acts like a transformer and generates very high voltages in the coils of wire and flows back down the 12 volt system causing damage.
Here are some pictures including one I cut open and replaced the diode. Electronic parts are cheap. tractor parts not so.



I often find on auto ranging multi meters that they are often confused by what scale they should be displaying.
If you put the diode in series with a test light like this one:

You should find the light turning on with one polarity across the diode and nothing the other way.
From Wikipedia:
A flyback diode (sometimes called a kickback diode, snubber diode, commutating diode, freewheeling diode, suppressor diode, suppression diode, clamp diode, is a diode connected across an inductor used to eliminate flyback, which is the sudden voltage spike seen across an inductive load when its supply current is suddenly reduced or interrupted.
Don't go ripping things apart just yet. Let me re read this thread.
Dave M7040