Spent the day finding switches, got no where with making the tractor move. Under the body-pan there are several switches, which one can see by peering under from the rear. Reasonably good access is acheived by removing 2 nuts and 4 bolts that hold the ~20" square piece of body-pan that holds the seat. Then there is much better access to the workings of the HST and 3pt linkages and switches. Unplugged the switches one at a time, removed them, tested them using meter and checking for state-change when moving the switch. No progress. Still cuts-out when HST toe-and-heel rocker is moved more than a smidgen off center.
I did find a carefully tied loop of baler twine on the left side of the tractor under the body-pan just inboard of the rear wheel, whatever it was tying the twine had rotted away and was no longer tying. Something tells me that baler twine rotted off whatever it was holding is pointing to my problem. That certainly fits with the way the previous owner ran his equipment. Further down that rabbit hole tomorrow.
On this particular engine and fuel pump setup, applying power to the fuel solenoid moves the fuel delivery rack from "off" to "inject fuel". Removing power from (unplugging) the fuel solenoid allows the return spring to move the fuel delivery rack back to the off position. To "hotwire" around the problem, I could connect the fuel solenoid directly to 12V power. Maybe use baler twine for part of that setup... But seriously, that would get things beyond this point of hangup, and allow further progress and further troubleshooting of who knows what further problems.
It needs a new alternator. Way back on post-1 of this thread I mentioned two dead Kubotas found in the bush of a lock-stock&barrel farm purchase. That other Kubota is running around the farm doing chores and working fine. This tractor I'm working on does not charge the battery while running, and the battery light is on. After checking fuses and the obvious stuff, I swapped the alternator off of the running chore tractor onto this tractor, and it now charges and the battery light is out. So swapping on a known-good alternator shows me its time to order an alternator. I'm getting good at R&R alternator.
I did find a carefully tied loop of baler twine on the left side of the tractor under the body-pan just inboard of the rear wheel, whatever it was tying the twine had rotted away and was no longer tying. Something tells me that baler twine rotted off whatever it was holding is pointing to my problem. That certainly fits with the way the previous owner ran his equipment. Further down that rabbit hole tomorrow.
On this particular engine and fuel pump setup, applying power to the fuel solenoid moves the fuel delivery rack from "off" to "inject fuel". Removing power from (unplugging) the fuel solenoid allows the return spring to move the fuel delivery rack back to the off position. To "hotwire" around the problem, I could connect the fuel solenoid directly to 12V power. Maybe use baler twine for part of that setup... But seriously, that would get things beyond this point of hangup, and allow further progress and further troubleshooting of who knows what further problems.
It needs a new alternator. Way back on post-1 of this thread I mentioned two dead Kubotas found in the bush of a lock-stock&barrel farm purchase. That other Kubota is running around the farm doing chores and working fine. This tractor I'm working on does not charge the battery while running, and the battery light is on. After checking fuses and the obvious stuff, I swapped the alternator off of the running chore tractor onto this tractor, and it now charges and the battery light is out. So swapping on a known-good alternator shows me its time to order an alternator. I'm getting good at R&R alternator.
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