I have been plagued by a fuse blowing problem on my ZL1801 in the charging circuit. I finally started working today to isolate the problem with my tester. I disconnected one item at a time and finally found the problem after the 2nd item that I tested.
I have never seen in over 35 years of working on vehicles, tractors or heavy equipment what was blowing a fuse quite like this. It was a dead short in the oil pressure switch. The instant I would put a fuse in it would pop it. I figured that I had a dead short someplace else on my tractor that is 30 odd years old.
Because I thought about it to much and refused to believe that the pressure switch was bad I retested it after I had it off the tractor. With my ohm meter it pegged out with no resistance.
I went to the Kubota dealer and got a new switch and installed it and another new fuse and tried again. It DID not pop the fuse and I got the light on for a moment at startup and it the light went out and the tractor is charging.
So that is a bit of a surprise that the oil pressure switch is in the charging curcuit but it is in some weird way.
So for $26.00 I fixed the tractor and ended up not tearing the entire wiring system apart to find a problem.
I have never seen in over 35 years of working on vehicles, tractors or heavy equipment what was blowing a fuse quite like this. It was a dead short in the oil pressure switch. The instant I would put a fuse in it would pop it. I figured that I had a dead short someplace else on my tractor that is 30 odd years old.
Because I thought about it to much and refused to believe that the pressure switch was bad I retested it after I had it off the tractor. With my ohm meter it pegged out with no resistance.
I went to the Kubota dealer and got a new switch and installed it and another new fuse and tried again. It DID not pop the fuse and I got the light on for a moment at startup and it the light went out and the tractor is charging.
So that is a bit of a surprise that the oil pressure switch is in the charging curcuit but it is in some weird way.
So for $26.00 I fixed the tractor and ended up not tearing the entire wiring system apart to find a problem.