ritcheyvs
Veteran Member
Alright. I just replaced the terminals on both + and - and it's doing the same thing. Will not start without a jump. Even when jumped I am seeing the battery light lit up. I have a battery charger and it said this thing was full this morning when I put it back on so there is no reason it should be the battery right?
The battery is reading at 11.56 when the key is turned off. When turning the key on, it drops down really low, as low as 4.5 and will not start, but then when I turn the key back to the off position, it goes back up to 11.56.
In short, you have a bad battery and maybe a bad alternator.
Your battery IS bad. You should see at least 12.5 volts on a good battery with no load. Fairly new batteries do go bad. Poor charging will kill a previously good battery. When you turn the key to on, the glow plugs come on and they draw significant current, maybe 30 amps. But that should not pull the voltage below about 11 volts if the battery is OK. Maybe you have some parasitic load that is draining the battery when the tractor sits; a bad alternator can do this.
Your battery is bad for sure, Take it to a car parts place (like AutoZone, Advance, Pep Boys, etc.) and they will test it for free (and then sell you a new one).
Even before you do that, check the battery voltage when the engine is running? It should be just over 14 volts and certainly no less than 13 volts. If this voltage is low you need to address your charging system, which may well be what is killing your battery. If you have ruled out a loose alternator belt, take the alternator to the auto store and have them test that too. If the alternator is bad, you can probably get a local shop to rebuild it much faster and cheaper than buying a new one from Kioti. You didn't state the age of your machine but alternator brushes do wear out and the internal rectifiers and regulators can fail, which may also drain the battery.
Once started, this type of Diesel engine will continue to run until the battery gets so low that the stop solenoid drops out (newer version which requires power to run). On the older version stop solenoid (requires power to stop) the engine will run indefinitely even with the battery removed. But don't disconnect the battery on a running engine or you may blow alternator diodes.
As a stop gap, you could install a good battery and when the tractor is parked disconnect the tractor ground cable (so the tractor can't drain the battery) and connect your charger.