woodlandfarms
Super Member
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2006
- Messages
- 6,137
- Location
- Los Angeles / SW Washington
- Tractor
- PowerTrac 1850, Kubota RTV x900
I was referring to grounding straps. They can be found in any automotive store. Silver mesh wire with battery type lugs at the ends...
But now things have become interesting. It is possible that the intermittent contact has blown a fuse.
So start at the beginning... Get yourself a volt meter (cheapo from anywhere) or even one of those probes that lights up can work.
Check to make sure your battery has juice. Follow those leads to the first stop. On my tractor it is the starter solenoid... If you have juice there then turn on the key... Also, as we are thinking ground is the culprit, use the battery terminal ground and then if you get a positive response try the engine as a ground, or the chasis. Your whole tractor is a ground or negative part of the batter, only the covered wires are positive... (this is a real simple way to look at it BTW)
Really, electrical and hydraulics kinda are the same. It all starts at one point and finishes at another. Follow the flow.
PT has a rep for mediocre wiring. Thankfully it is dirt simple so you do not need an EE degree to repair, but still frustrating.
But now things have become interesting. It is possible that the intermittent contact has blown a fuse.
So start at the beginning... Get yourself a volt meter (cheapo from anywhere) or even one of those probes that lights up can work.
Check to make sure your battery has juice. Follow those leads to the first stop. On my tractor it is the starter solenoid... If you have juice there then turn on the key... Also, as we are thinking ground is the culprit, use the battery terminal ground and then if you get a positive response try the engine as a ground, or the chasis. Your whole tractor is a ground or negative part of the batter, only the covered wires are positive... (this is a real simple way to look at it BTW)
Really, electrical and hydraulics kinda are the same. It all starts at one point and finishes at another. Follow the flow.
PT has a rep for mediocre wiring. Thankfully it is dirt simple so you do not need an EE degree to repair, but still frustrating.