buickanddeere
Super Member
Anyone know where I can obtain a basic maintenance manual for my 820?
You could try getting a manual from John Deere? 1-800-522-7448. Don't waste your time and money on an I&T booklet.
Anyone know where I can obtain a basic maintenance manual for my 820?
Thankyou for the come back the pump is a JDB there is one wire that goes to the neg- side of the fuse box.thats the only wire on the pump.the tractor was a mess when i pulled it out of a barn.I had to clean up all the wiring.the only other wire going to dash is the red wire from the coil and a black ground wire which is on top of the starter. is the wire from the pump on the left side of the motor should be a 12v wire? ty again ive cleaned this bad boy up and its starting to look good.Would like to get this going to bushhog with it.As the other tractors are gas.and they love it lolol.:laughing::laughing:
my pump looks just like yours and i see the wire goes on the inside bolt this helps as the wire was on the outside bolt im going to change.tyty
You could try getting a manual from John Deere? 1-800-522-7448. Don't waste your time and money on an I&T booklet.
my pump looks just like yours and i see the wire goes on the inside bolt this helps as the wire was on the outside bolt im going to change.tyty
There is no negative in a fuse block. There is line, +, or source, the fuse, then load. This connection after the fuse may be referred to a protected or fused. Some wires may not go through a fuse block but may have fusible links. Chrysler likes to use fusible links in their charging system wiring and fusible links sometimes have some pretty big amp ratings. Negative or ground refers to the - on the battery which usually connects to metal on the engine. Only reason to bring the correct terminology up is some devices have a fused power source and also have a negative or ground wire. The lights on my tractor work that way as they are mounted in rubber grommets that insulate.
I was looking for some sites on the internet to explain with pictures but I failed. Anyhow all someone was trying to suggest is the proper term is important when troubleshooting. Hopefully I used the proper terms. ;-)
Also note that some cars have positive ground instead of negative ground. I have not seen one but I believe they are seen in the UK.