AimmeAshley
Member
- Joined
- May 31, 2021
- Threads
- 1
- Messages
- 21
Okay, I finally got a hold of jumpers.
I bypassed the PTO and brake switch by shorting both the purple and purple/white wires on each one.
I also bypassed the seat switch by placing a piece of business card between the tiny slot on pins 2 and 3.
I removed the starter motor and checked the kill wire to see if it was shorted to the engine chassis, and it wasn’t. I ended up placing electrical tape around the wire anyway and the starting motor back in place.
With all the bypass jumpers in place, and with the kill wire connected back to the ignition coil, I’m still not getting a spark.
Then, I removed the hour meter/service reminder. Behind the hour meter device are 4 tabs. With the hour meter removed, I measured the resistance from the ground tab (where the black wire would normally go) of the hour meter to where the tab where the white wire would normally be connected. This white wire would normally goback to the magneto on my D100 schematic. This gave me the 9.89KOhms that I normally saw from my kill wire to ground that I saw originally.
If the kill wire to ground is normally supposed to give me an open load with the ignition switch in the run position, then my gut feeling is the hour meter is internally shorted.
With the kill wire removed and the hour meter unplugged, the mower wouldn’t start. I guess the mower requires the hour meter to be plugged in be able to provide spark. Once I plugged it back in, with the Kill wire still removed from the ignition coil, the mower would start.
Looks like there’s an internal short from hour meter? Is there a way I can test out the hour meter, aside from my resistance checks?
If anyone has a similar mower, would someone be willing to remove the their hour meter and give me a resistance measurement from where it would normally connect from ground to magneto?
I bypassed the PTO and brake switch by shorting both the purple and purple/white wires on each one.
I also bypassed the seat switch by placing a piece of business card between the tiny slot on pins 2 and 3.
I removed the starter motor and checked the kill wire to see if it was shorted to the engine chassis, and it wasn’t. I ended up placing electrical tape around the wire anyway and the starting motor back in place.
With all the bypass jumpers in place, and with the kill wire connected back to the ignition coil, I’m still not getting a spark.
Then, I removed the hour meter/service reminder. Behind the hour meter device are 4 tabs. With the hour meter removed, I measured the resistance from the ground tab (where the black wire would normally go) of the hour meter to where the tab where the white wire would normally be connected. This white wire would normally goback to the magneto on my D100 schematic. This gave me the 9.89KOhms that I normally saw from my kill wire to ground that I saw originally.
If the kill wire to ground is normally supposed to give me an open load with the ignition switch in the run position, then my gut feeling is the hour meter is internally shorted.
With the kill wire removed and the hour meter unplugged, the mower wouldn’t start. I guess the mower requires the hour meter to be plugged in be able to provide spark. Once I plugged it back in, with the Kill wire still removed from the ignition coil, the mower would start.
Looks like there’s an internal short from hour meter? Is there a way I can test out the hour meter, aside from my resistance checks?
If anyone has a similar mower, would someone be willing to remove the their hour meter and give me a resistance measurement from where it would normally connect from ground to magneto?