RCW
Well-known member
Lifetime Member
Equipment
BX2360, FEL, MMM, BX2750D snowblower. 1953 Minneapolis Moline ZAU
Just to be clear, this is probably a foolish question and not a tutorial.
Probably derived from recent cold snap.
Recent years several folks have fried one or more electronic control modules (ECM) in their tractors just by replacing batteries. Some tractors have 3 or 4 ECM?
Heard similar horror stories for passenger vehicles/small trucks.
Some have had to pay many $1,000's to fix.
My BX has no electronics to fry.
I recall a post a couple years ago where I was gun shy about replacing a battery on one of my vehicles because of the same risk.
Without concern, I've replaced many vehicle batteries over time with ECM without issue. Maybe I was lucky.....
Is there a Best Practice to replace a battery?
Probably derived from recent cold snap.
Recent years several folks have fried one or more electronic control modules (ECM) in their tractors just by replacing batteries. Some tractors have 3 or 4 ECM?
Heard similar horror stories for passenger vehicles/small trucks.
Some have had to pay many $1,000's to fix.
My BX has no electronics to fry.
I recall a post a couple years ago where I was gun shy about replacing a battery on one of my vehicles because of the same risk.
Without concern, I've replaced many vehicle batteries over time with ECM without issue. Maybe I was lucky.....
Is there a Best Practice to replace a battery?
- When removing, I disconnect negative/ground first, then positive.
- Reverse order when replacing/reconnecting. Positive post first, then ground.
- Does that method work for modern ECM tractors?
- Does it depend on make/model?
- Does that replacement order typically apply to cars/trucks?
- I recall someone saying they actually hook up a temporary 12v source (e.g., temporary battery or jump pack) to ensure the system remains energized during the process.
- Is #6 a common requirement to avoid ECM damage?