Electrical deviced on fuel line

   / Electrical deviced on fuel line #2  
Most likely is a heater, possibly an aux. elec. pump but dont think so. Also there is an aftermarket shutdown system made that kills the engine when low oil psi or high water temp. exists and the fuel solenoid looks alot like that. But never knew of Komatsu using that from the factory and yours does look factory.
 
   / Electrical deviced on fuel line #3  
I would guess it to be either the low oil shutdown or emergency shutdown, obviously discontinued. Does this machine shut down by key or do you pull a handle?
 
   / Electrical deviced on fuel line
  • Thread Starter
#4  
It shuts down by moving the throttle to the stop position. The key was bypassed when I bought it so I'm not sure if it would have shut down through it. My ford tractor shuts down via choke.
 
   / Electrical deviced on fuel line #5  
It appears to be a fuel shut off solenoid, maybe in case of an accident. They are on a lot of engines to prevent them running after an accident. or roll over, etc.

Does the engine work with the wires off? The solenoid could also be bad, and not working

It might also be a water indicator for the fuel filter, and shuts down the engine when there is water in the fuel.
 
   / Electrical deviced on fuel line #6  
It looks like a shut off solenoid to me to. Have you tried applying power to it to see if it does anything?
 
   / Electrical deviced on fuel line #7  
Yep. Fuel shutoff solenoid. Can't tell how or what activates it, but that's what it is. (At the risk of sounding pragmatic... diesels don't use spark, so the only way to shut 'em off is to stop the fuel flow... hence, a device of some kind to block fuel.)

From experience with refrigeration solenoids in liquid lines, the shape & design of the housing suggests to me that this is what its purpose is. I'd be interested to learn if you find it does anything when power is applied to the leads--
 
   / Electrical deviced on fuel line
  • Thread Starter
#8  
Good ideas. This weekend I'll see if I can find where the wires connect to and measure the voltage to see if I can determine what it takes. I know its a 24V system (2 car batteries in series). I'll also measure across the wires to see if I get a soleniod type reading (5 to 30 ohms maybe).
 
   / Electrical deviced on fuel line #9  
Good ideas. This weekend I'll see if I can find where the wires connect to and measure the voltage to see if I can determine what it takes. I know its a 24V system (2 car batteries in series). I'll also measure across the wires to see if I get a soleniod type reading (5 to 30 ohms maybe).

You could also try this. Remove the line on the output of the solenoid and see if fuel is flowing. Then take some jumpers, and connect to battery, and touch the wires and see if fuel starts or stops. If no change is observed, then the solenoid may be defective, and that is why they disconnected it. I don't think you would have two shut off devices.
 
   / Electrical deviced on fuel line #10  

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