Still not finding drain of battery. Bought a new battery just to take that out of the picture. Still happening with a new battery.
I began some wire testing on the circuitry to see if I could find a wire that may be leaking to ground.
The regulator is brand new. I tested the continuity from the dynamo which is also new, on both wires to the plug at the regulator and all that checks good.
I also checked for continuity on the wires in the charging system fuse line. That also checks good.
I am unsure of where to go next with diagnostics, but I fear that there may be a hard to diagnose issue with the mower's combination box. Does anyone have some guidance on how to begin to check this component out and what kind of meter readings should I look for? I see no way described in my Shop Manual of how to check the combo box. I also see no explanation of how to test the stop solenoid.
Any help would be very much appreciated.
To recap this thread, I charge the battery before each mowing and the mower keeps running fine for the period I cut. But, the instant I stop the mower for refuel or something else, the mower will not restart and the battery is always found at about 75% of charge. I charge back up to 95-100% and mower starts up fine.
OK - here is another way to skin this cat,
unhook your neg cable on battery, take your VOM and set it to AMPS - NOT VOLTS!!!! , (gonna have to use the other hole on the meter typically) take one lead and place it on the unhooked battery lead, take the other and place it on the battery terminal that has no lead.........
- if there is indeed a battery drain, it will show either a pos or neg number .....this is all done with the engine off.
Tell me what the amp draw is - I gonna guess something high, like a couple of amps......
now if you can - unplug fuses, pull out fuse and "see" if amp draw changes.....replace fuse, keep doing this until you find something that makes it go to zero.
If none of the fuses are telling the story, then you might need to unhook the leads to the rectifier/regulator and go from there,
something is killing the battery - did you ever tell us what the charging circuit is placing on the battery at near WOT? Again, the dyno is not gonna place a lot of juice at idle or even at 25% throttle, but once you run up the rpm range, you should be getting 14+ volts DC at the battery.
Report back any and all findings.