TheCommissioner
Member
Thought I'd share my recent experience with my 2007 L3400 that I could not start. Fortunately we (spouse and me) figured it out.
After returning home on R&R from Afghanistan, I went to start the tractor. It cranked and cranked but wouldn't fire. This is the first time ever that the tractor behaved like that despite sitting idle for long periods of time between R&R's. The tractor has less than 90 lifetime hours and still has the original battery.
Figuring it was the fuel system, I had my wife try to start the tractor while I watched under the hood. Much to my surprise, she got it started! I was like, "What did you do??" Apparently she jiggled the ignition switch and found a sweet spot where contacts were made that enabled the fuel pump to start.
So I bought a new ignition switch for $43 and swapped it out with the malfunctioning one and the tractor started right up. In order to hook up the new switch, it was necessary to pull the instrument panel to gain access.
Moral of the story, I was fixated on a fuel problem and my wife was oblivious to any of it so she had a different paradigm. Therefore, two heads are better than one! I am really thankful this turned out okay because it could have gotten expensive getting a mechanic from the local dealership out there to make the repair.
After returning home on R&R from Afghanistan, I went to start the tractor. It cranked and cranked but wouldn't fire. This is the first time ever that the tractor behaved like that despite sitting idle for long periods of time between R&R's. The tractor has less than 90 lifetime hours and still has the original battery.
Figuring it was the fuel system, I had my wife try to start the tractor while I watched under the hood. Much to my surprise, she got it started! I was like, "What did you do??" Apparently she jiggled the ignition switch and found a sweet spot where contacts were made that enabled the fuel pump to start.
So I bought a new ignition switch for $43 and swapped it out with the malfunctioning one and the tractor started right up. In order to hook up the new switch, it was necessary to pull the instrument panel to gain access.
Moral of the story, I was fixated on a fuel problem and my wife was oblivious to any of it so she had a different paradigm. Therefore, two heads are better than one! I am really thankful this turned out okay because it could have gotten expensive getting a mechanic from the local dealership out there to make the repair.