JimMc
Platinum Member
For many years diesel engines were shut down by mechanically closing off the fuel supply ( a diesel engine doesn't have an ignition circuit like a gas engine). The key, if you had one, was to access the starter and lighting circuits.
I remember the first diesel tractor I ran as a kid. I turned the key off and it just kept running. A local farmer had hired me to help him out and I didn't want to admit I didn't know how to shut it down so I left it running thru lunch. For a week, every night I would shut it down by thottling down to an idle and letting the chutch out to kill it. Finally one night, he saw me do this and came over and showed me the red fuel shutoff knob. I felt like an idiot, but he was OK about it.
Nowadays, most manufacturers use a fuel solenoid, and turning off the key shuts off the fuel.
This is why many tractors also use an accumulator to indicate engine hours. The tach is mechanical driven off the camshaft rather than electric. Electric indicates the number of hours the circuit has been energized, mechanical accumulates the number revolutions the engine has made regardless of speed.
I remember the first diesel tractor I ran as a kid. I turned the key off and it just kept running. A local farmer had hired me to help him out and I didn't want to admit I didn't know how to shut it down so I left it running thru lunch. For a week, every night I would shut it down by thottling down to an idle and letting the chutch out to kill it. Finally one night, he saw me do this and came over and showed me the red fuel shutoff knob. I felt like an idiot, but he was OK about it.
Nowadays, most manufacturers use a fuel solenoid, and turning off the key shuts off the fuel.
This is why many tractors also use an accumulator to indicate engine hours. The tach is mechanical driven off the camshaft rather than electric. Electric indicates the number of hours the circuit has been energized, mechanical accumulates the number revolutions the engine has made regardless of speed.