Charles, a number of things you say don't make sense. I too have a replacement seat from Messick's, replacing it only involved the hinge at the front, didn't involve touching the switches or wiring. There are no connections "in" the seat itself. What "top panel under the seat", there isn't any. The switches and wiring are right there, when you lift the seat up.
No, I meant the wires to each switch are in pairs, each pair is in its own plastic loom. If you tore all that apart, then I guess they wouldn't be anymore.
Yes the Red w/Black stripe wires are +12V from the 5A fuse which is on the switched power circuit, the other wires go back to the OPC like how I described the circuits in my first couple posts. If you haven't checked the 5A fuse to see if it's blown, that might be a really good idea now... Check all of them while you're at it.
Please do not do this. Almost anything is a better way.
Sorry, I wasn't being clear enough. Messick swapped in a seat from one of the pro lawn mowers. Its much more comfortable, but in the process they had to mess with the original seat wiring, since the new seat is suspension etc and wouldn't trigger the seat switch otherwise. Its the same in the looms, but different past the splices, which are pretty unique to my machine. So at first I thought i was a splice problem, and I took all the splices off (easy enough to rewire), but I neglected to label them and then the next morning did the usual forgetting which went where.
Panel wise - I'm referring to the sheet metal under the seat, which seems to be the only way to get access to the PTO lever switches. I REALLY don't want to go there, I've got too many parts, and too little tractor as it is.
Checking the 5A... no, I haven't. Probably a good idea. I assumed it would be fine since all other electrical on the tractor works fine, but if the 5a only feeds the OPC, that might be my problem. Boy, wouldn't that be nice. hmmm. I could have easily shorted that while messing wit the wires.
Why would jumping from the 5A to the OPC, connector by connector, to see which the bad circuit is, be bad? Worry about feeding too much juice into the OPC?
I've got a Fluke Multimeter, if there would be a better way to check with that. I'm about the opposite of expert with it, though, bought it because I figured I have to learn how to use one, not becase I already know...
Thanks again for all the help. I figure its not just useful for me, but for the next person who has issues with the OPC (a pretty common problem, per dealers).