TG 1860 engine dying when pto is engaged

David W

New member

Equipment
2001Tg 1860 2022 BX 2380
Jun 12, 2022
2
0
1
Stockton Alabama
Hello, I'm new here and need some help. Have been reading here for a couple weeks now. My issue is when you engage the pto it kills the engine. I have replaced the pto switch, seat switch, brake switch and reverse awareness switch. I have also replaced the stop relay and timer stop relay and all the fuses. When I engage the pto the stop solenoid is killing the engine. I currently have the deck off and clutch unplugged and still kills engine. I don't know what else to replace at this point.
 

woodman55

Well-known member

Equipment
L6060HSTC, RTV 1100
May 15, 2022
927
721
93
canada
It is not unheard of to have a defective new switch. Work you way through the circuit and verify that each switch is doing what it is suppose to. You may also have a switch/linkage out of adjustment.
 

David W

New member

Equipment
2001Tg 1860 2022 BX 2380
Jun 12, 2022
2
0
1
Stockton Alabama
It is not unheard of to have a defective new switch. Work you way through the circuit and verify that each switch is doing what it is suppose to. You may also have a switch/linkage out of adjustment.
I have checked every connection for loose wires and have found nothing. I also feared that I got a faulty new part. Is there any way the ignition can cause this? I've just been going through everything on the electrical schematic that connects to the safety system
 

woodman55

Well-known member

Equipment
L6060HSTC, RTV 1100
May 15, 2022
927
721
93
canada
I am going to guess and assume ( that's a risky thing to be doing) that the kill solenoid needs to be powered for the engine to run. That being stated, you need to get a multi meter and start checking continuity at each switch to see if it is functioning properly, ( open or closed at the proper time).

You could also, once the engine dies, use a test light to check where you are loosing power on that circuit. Start at the key switch and check each connection at each switch and follow the circuit until you no longer have power. Without seeing the actual schematic or knowing the machine this a good guess in what to do.

Be systematic and verify each step before moving on to the next step. Assume nothing, verify everything.

It could be a dirty connection, a switch out of adjustment, a broken wire or possibly a bad switch.

hope this helps.