ve9aa
Well-known member
Equipment
TG1860, BX2380 -backblade, bx2830 snowblower, fel, weight box,pallet forks,etc
One other fella was helping you with that....you musta missed his pictures he took for you, some posts back.That's probably what my dad meant, come to think of it. I have a multimeter, where do I attach the lead? Also I'm close but not totally sure where the glow plugs are in my original pic of the engine
Think of them sorta as "skinny spark plugs" connected by a fat wire (bus bar).
Most likely they are in parallel. (which will make individual readings impossible until you unhook each one)
super super easy to check them. See pix the other guys posted for you.
You'll want them each at a couple Ohms I suppose. Touch your meter leads together first to see how much resistance THEY have. It'll vary per meter, how much battery is left in the meter and the state of the leads themselves. Typically (a broad statement to be sure) you'll see 0.3-1.3 of resistance with the meter leads.
Whatever it is, subtract that from the resistance of the glow plugs.
Unhook the bus bar (wire) from the glow plugs....Touch one meter lead to the engine in a nice clean spot.
Touch the other end to the nut where you just unhooked the bus bar. If you see (for example) 1.5Ohms, and your meter-leads-alone where 0.5Ohms, then your glow plug read 1Ohm and is presumed good.
If you see O/L (over load) on your meter, or just an impossibly high reading (in the Meg Ohm range) then your glow plug is open (burned out or broken) and thus NFG.
Move onto the next glow plug.
AS a note. I don't think even on a summers day my TG1860 (700cc diesel) would start w/o glow plugs.
EXTRA EDIT: You can possibly save yourself a tiny amount of work and test all glow plugs at once by leaving the bus bar connected.
If all 3 in parallel read impossibly high (open) then all 3 are no good.
Myself, if 1 of 3 or even 2 of 3 are bad, at this age I'd likely replace all 3 and keep the good one for an emergency spare.
My money is on Dad not wanting to monkey with them, they burned out and he was told by someone "just use ether" (bad advice)
I've been wrong before.
EXRTA EXTRA edit. If you don't understand parallel resistances completely, just test each GP individually, because you if you measure them all in parallel, see (for example 1.2Ohms) all that really tells you is at least ONE GP is still good......won't tell you if 1, 2 or 3 is good and won't tell you which one.
I'll leave my extra edit stand as it's been up for 30 minutes and is a good indicator if all 3 are bad.
(but that's really all it's good for....all bad or "at least one good", which is kinda not really what you're afer.
Oops!
Last edited: