I had another thread going (hydraulic chute) but figured I'd be better starting a new one since this one deals with the super winch on the rear blower.
I have a B7800 Kubota with a E60 Normand snowblower on the rear and it has a super winch mounted to it with a chain to turn the chute.
I've only had the machine for about a month and up until now the winch worked great. Then it blew a fuse and I haven't been able to get it working since.
The previous owner had 10 gauge wire and a 25 amp fuse but it kept blowing the fuse when I tried a new one in it.
So I took the two wires from the winch and tried them on my spare battery and the winch turns fine. I also ran two direct wires to both sides of the battery and it works fine.
I then installed a 30 amp inline fuse and it blows the fuse as soon as I touch the wires to turn the chute.
I had my brother in law check the amperage draw and he said it's only drawing 13 amps so why is it blowing this fuse. He checked the draw at the two wires coming off the motor with the spare battery.
So I'm just wondering if the fact I'm using too light a wire is causing it to draw more amps. We didn't check the draw near the battery as he was stuck for time.
Wolfman in the other thread had suggested that I may need as large as a #2 wire and I think that could be the problem. Although the previous owner had used #10 and it worked fine.
I'm thinking I should get a much heavier wire and also a heavier inline fuse wire and see if that will help.
Question is why did it work fine with 10 gauge and all of a sudden start blowing fuses. Would a lighter wire cause it to draw more amps? I'm not very electrical savvy so any suggestions would be a bonus.
Wolfman - my brother in law suggested to use a heavy wire used for underground electrical. Do you think that is doable?
Stumped in Nova Scotia Canada
I have a B7800 Kubota with a E60 Normand snowblower on the rear and it has a super winch mounted to it with a chain to turn the chute.
I've only had the machine for about a month and up until now the winch worked great. Then it blew a fuse and I haven't been able to get it working since.
The previous owner had 10 gauge wire and a 25 amp fuse but it kept blowing the fuse when I tried a new one in it.
So I took the two wires from the winch and tried them on my spare battery and the winch turns fine. I also ran two direct wires to both sides of the battery and it works fine.
I then installed a 30 amp inline fuse and it blows the fuse as soon as I touch the wires to turn the chute.
I had my brother in law check the amperage draw and he said it's only drawing 13 amps so why is it blowing this fuse. He checked the draw at the two wires coming off the motor with the spare battery.
So I'm just wondering if the fact I'm using too light a wire is causing it to draw more amps. We didn't check the draw near the battery as he was stuck for time.
Wolfman in the other thread had suggested that I may need as large as a #2 wire and I think that could be the problem. Although the previous owner had used #10 and it worked fine.
I'm thinking I should get a much heavier wire and also a heavier inline fuse wire and see if that will help.
Question is why did it work fine with 10 gauge and all of a sudden start blowing fuses. Would a lighter wire cause it to draw more amps? I'm not very electrical savvy so any suggestions would be a bonus.
Wolfman - my brother in law suggested to use a heavy wire used for underground electrical. Do you think that is doable?
Stumped in Nova Scotia Canada