3510 electrical question

   / 3510 electrical question #1  

Erik_in_Hoyt

Platinum Member
Joined
May 30, 2006
Messages
789
Location
hoyt, Ks
Tractor
century 2535
This weekend I was working along, punching holes in the clay and setting posts for my new pole barn.
I turned the tractor off and an hour later when I went to restart it to clean up the jobsite for the evening, the battery was dead as a doornail.
Yesterday after the rain stopped and the ground dried enough to not be soup any more I tried to jump start it with my Dakota. It would start to turn over, but obviously I don't have enough alternator on that 3.7L v6 to do enough good.
I've heard other folks have had alternator problems with their 2810 & 3510's, but never with this few of hours (had it 6 months, under 60 hours on the meter)
any advice or suggestions other than "buy a battery charger and see how long it'll go this time"?

thanks!
 
   / 3510 electrical question #2  
This weekend I was working along, punching holes in the clay and setting posts for my new pole barn.
I turned the tractor off and an hour later when I went to restart it to clean up the jobsite for the evening, the battery was dead as a doornail.
Yesterday after the rain stopped and the ground dried enough to not be soup any more I tried to jump start it with my Dakota. It would start to turn over, but obviously I don't have enough alternator on that 3.7L v6 to do enough good.
I've heard other folks have had alternator problems with their 2810 & 3510's, but never with this few of hours (had it 6 months, under 60 hours on the meter)
any advice or suggestions other than "buy a battery charger and see how long it'll go this time"?

thanks!
I have heard of alternator problems as a key concern on these TYM made tractors, although I never had such a problem on my 2005 3510. It sounds like you are still under warranty and this is a quick and painless fix. I'd charge it up and get it to the dealer as soon as possible.

Rusty
 
   / 3510 electrical question #3  
This weekend I was working along, punching holes in the clay and setting posts for my new pole barn.
I turned the tractor off and an hour later when I went to restart it to clean up the jobsite for the evening, the battery was dead as a doornail.
Yesterday after the rain stopped and the ground dried enough to not be soup any more I tried to jump start it with my Dakota. It would start to turn over, but obviously I don't have enough alternator on that 3.7L v6 to do enough good.
I've heard other folks have had alternator problems with their 2810 & 3510's, but never with this few of hours (had it 6 months, under 60 hours on the meter)
any advice or suggestions other than "buy a battery charger and see how long it'll go this time"?

thanks!
Sounds more likely you have a battery with a shorted cell, take it out and see if it will take a charge or have it tested. You've got more than enough alternator in the Dakota to do the job.
 
   / 3510 electrical question
  • Thread Starter
#4  
thanks, guys - and I also emailed my dealership to see which way they want me to jump. (more testing or bring it to them)
 
   / 3510 electrical question #5  
check your cables for corrosion and or loseness.i had the same problem and after a new battery i found the real problem:eek:
 
   / 3510 electrical question
  • Thread Starter
#6  
that was the first thing I checked - and would have been very surprised to find problems along those lines on a machine that I took delivery on 5 months ago.
 
   / 3510 electrical question
  • Thread Starter
#7  
I got some 4 gauge jumper cables (just in case the ones I had weren't up to snuff), hooked it up to the Dakota, and it fired right up.
Ran it for about 45 minutes taking care of some chores, parked it where I could get a charger to it with no problems, turned it off and tried to fire it back up -- dead.
Obviously it's not charging, which suggests an alternator issue, so I hooked it up to a charger and will check it tomorrow to see if it will start.
If it starts, I will trailer it into town and see if I can get Autozone or O'Reilley's to hook it up to their diagnostic machne to tell me which part of the starting or electrical system is acting up before I haul it the 150 miles to the dealership I bought it from.
 
   / 3510 electrical question #8  
I got some 4 gauge jumper cables (just in case the ones I had weren't up to snuff), hooked it up to the Dakota, and it fired right up.
Ran it for about 45 minutes taking care of some chores, parked it where I could get a charger to it with no problems, turned it off and tried to fire it back up -- dead.
Obviously it's not charging, which suggests an alternator issue, so I hooked it up to a charger and will check it tomorrow to see if it will start.
If it starts, I will trailer it into town and see if I can get Autozone or O'Reilley's to hook it up to their diagnostic machne to tell me which part of the starting or electrical system is acting up before I haul it the 150 miles to the dealership I bought it from.
Good luck Eric. Sounds like you are on the right track. Let's hope that 150 mile trek can somehow be avoided.

Rusty
 
   / 3510 electrical question #9  
I got some 4 gauge jumper cables (just in case the ones I had weren't up to snuff), hooked it up to the Dakota, and it fired right up.
Ran it for about 45 minutes taking care of some chores, parked it where I could get a charger to it with no problems, turned it off and tried to fire it back up -- dead.
Obviously it's not charging, which suggests an alternator issue, so I hooked it up to a charger and will check it tomorrow to see if it will start.
If it starts, I will trailer it into town and see if I can get Autozone or O'Reilley's to hook it up to their diagnostic machne to tell me which part of the starting or electrical system is acting up before I haul it the 150 miles to the dealership I bought it from.

I'm not sure by the posting if you've removed the battery and had it tested because that would be the easiest thing to do, a shorted cell may not show itself until a load is put to it. I had a battery which was three years old that failed this way. Took a charge but then failed the minute the key was turned and jumping from another vehicle made no different.
 
Last edited:
   / 3510 electrical question
  • Thread Starter
#10  
so far I've checked all my connections & wiring.
jumped the tractor to make sure it really would start.
after jump starting it I ran it for about 45 minutes so if the alternator was going to do anything it would, turned it off, then tried to restart immediately after - and it wouldn't.
then I hooked it up to a charger and let that run it's diagnostic - and it said the battery was OK. (did not remove the battery from the tractor)
When fully charged, the battery supplied 12.8 V (not under load)
Then I waited 3 days to see if it would hold a charge -- and it did. Started right up like there had never been a problem. This suggests to me the battery does not have a bad cell.

At this point my next step is to haul the tractor the 20+ miles into town and have the charging system checked at an auto parts store, because they provide the service free - and that should give me the information I need to talk to the folks I bought it from for my warranty repair claim, since they're 150+ miles from home and I'd be pretty unhappy if I got it there only to find out I had a bad cell on the battery or a bad connection.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

10' Unused Feed Bunk (A50515)
10' Unused Feed...
2015 Chevrolet Silverado 2500HD (A52748)
2015 Chevrolet...
(10) 28' Continuous Fencing Panels (A50515)
(10) 28'...
2010 Ford Edge SE SUV (A51694)
2010 Ford Edge SE...
1600 gal Poly Tank (A50515)
1600 gal Poly Tank...
2121 (A51244)
2121 (A51244)
 
Top