BX1880 dead

vtmountainwalker

New member

Equipment
BX1880, bucket, mower deck, trailer and DR leaf vacuum
Oct 10, 2012
3
0
1
Ryegate, Vermont
Turned on ignition switch, panel lights came on glow plug started then all shutdown. Tried again... no lights, no power nothing. I recharged the battery still nothing. I checked the 50amp slow blow fuse and it appears ok. Any suggestion as to what my next step should be, would be helpful. We live in Northern Vermont, so temperature is a consideration. The machine is kept in a very small barn and had been last used three weeks ago and everything was fine.
 

Roadworthy

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Lifetime Member

Equipment
L2501 HST
Aug 17, 2019
1,649
526
113
Benton City, WA
Check your battery voltage while connected to the tractor. Sometimes you can put a surface charge on which looks good until you load it. Batteries don't always die over time. Sometimes it's sudden, especially when cold.
 

Russell King

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Lifetime Member

Equipment
L185F, Modern Ag Competitor 4’ shredder, Rhino tiller, rear dirt scoop
Jun 17, 2012
5,361
1,414
113
Austin, Texas
Check the condition of the battery cables and clean all of the connection points of the battery cables to be bright metal connections on both sides.
 
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DustyRusty

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Equipment
2020 BX23S, BX2822 Snowblower, Curtis Deluxe Cab,
Nov 8, 2015
6,237
4,816
113
North East CT
Whenever I read a statement " I checked the 50amp slow blow fuse and it appears ok. " I wonder why the word "appears" belongs in the sentence. After all, a fuse is either good or bad, and there is no in-between, so this leaves me with the assumption that you visually checked the fuse, and you didn't see any discernable indication of a defect with the fuse. If this is the case, then you need to recheck the fuse properly, and that is with an ohm meter. Fuses can appear to be functional when looking for a break in the filament and not seeing one, however, they still can be defective. You can't see the entire fuse filament at the metal ends or the attachment of the filament to the spades under a plastic fuse. If you don't have a meter to check the fuse, then replace the fuse to see if the situation changes. If there is a short in the wiring, then the new fuse is going to also fail, so this is really not a reliable method of testing that I rarely would recommend.
 
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SAR Tracker

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Equipment
LX2610HSDC, FEL, LX2963 Snowblower, BH77 Backhoe, forks
Nov 17, 2020
218
310
63
Central Oregon
Remove the battery, take it into any reputable auto parts store, and have them check it with a load.
 

i7win7

Well-known member

Equipment
BX2370, B2650 grapple, tree puller, trailer mover, 3 point hoist, mower, tiller
Feb 21, 2020
3,379
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113
Central, IL
also clean the ground connection on the frame 23dfcca32cbbd531e9e7ea71d3155d16e7db46d2199827fe780d8969fe49cc80_1.jpg.jpg
 

ve9aa

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Equipment
TG1860, BX2380 -backblade, bx2830 snowblower, fel, weight box,pallet forks,etc
Apr 11, 2021
1,202
982
113
NB, Canada
...or better yet, buy one of these and use it for life...rather than running back and forth to your local auto parts store every time you have a suspect battery.

A voltmeter *MAY* tell you part of the story, but it will only tell you PART of the story.

I've seen batteries measure 12.8vdc at rest, but once you apply any kind of a load, poof, down to 2volts or something.

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atitus

Member

Equipment
BX1880+FEL,MMM,Blower
Feb 11, 2019
144
21
18
Worcester, MA
It's been awhile since this happened to me but, what about safety sensor? Check pto to see if it's engaged, etc. I can't remember if it cuts out only the starter or if the ignition entirely locked out...
 

PaulL

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Equipment
B2601
Jul 17, 2017
2,433
1,363
113
NZ
You had lights and power. You now have no lights, no power, nothing. It wasn't a gradual thing, and didn't happen while you were away from the machine - it stopped right then and there. That sounds a lot like a fuse or some sort of burned out wiring, not a battery problem. A weak battery would still give you lights after you've had it on the charger (and definitely whilst you have it one the charger - the charger should be enough to run the lights and glow plug).

I personally wouldn't get an analog multimeter, it costs about $20 to get an OK digital one.
(that's in NZ dollars, so about $20 US dollars, probably cheaper given the size of your market)