As mentioned in a prior thread, my battery will hardly turn the tractor over.
I measured the voltage from positive to negative terminal with the tractor off and the tractor running at high RPM. There was no difference in voltage. Just for kicks, I took the positive terminal off, and measured the voltage while running. It was 0.3 volts.
I then unplugged the dynamo from the wiring harness, and took voltages across all three wires while running at wide open throttle. They were always been 28 to 30 volts. I understand from another forum that it should be 43 volts between brown and white and 30 between brown and yellow. Is this true or false? Is 30 volts too low between B & W? These are all AC voltage measurements.
To complicate matters, someone has rewired my machine and did not follow the wiring diagram. Tell-tale clues include the fact that no wires go to the light switch, and some amateurish type splices. It wouldn't surprise me if my charging problem is related to a bad splice.
If I don't care about having headlights or a horn, what is the simplest way to wire this tractor and make it work? I think it would be a real chore to trace all of the wires and wire it up as per factory.
Is there any way to test the rectifier?
Thank you,
Chris
I measured the voltage from positive to negative terminal with the tractor off and the tractor running at high RPM. There was no difference in voltage. Just for kicks, I took the positive terminal off, and measured the voltage while running. It was 0.3 volts.
I then unplugged the dynamo from the wiring harness, and took voltages across all three wires while running at wide open throttle. They were always been 28 to 30 volts. I understand from another forum that it should be 43 volts between brown and white and 30 between brown and yellow. Is this true or false? Is 30 volts too low between B & W? These are all AC voltage measurements.
To complicate matters, someone has rewired my machine and did not follow the wiring diagram. Tell-tale clues include the fact that no wires go to the light switch, and some amateurish type splices. It wouldn't surprise me if my charging problem is related to a bad splice.
If I don't care about having headlights or a horn, what is the simplest way to wire this tractor and make it work? I think it would be a real chore to trace all of the wires and wire it up as per factory.
Is there any way to test the rectifier?
Thank you,
Chris