Tractor is a Craftsman GT-6000, 917.257740
Battery reads 14.6v, but the tractor fails to crank by the ignition key.
When I apply battery voltage to the starter solenoid trigger terminal (below), the starter turns the motor over, so I believe starter and solenoid are both ok.

Based on this, I expect the problem is in the ign switch, pto switch, or an interlock switch. The seat switch is jumped - when I bought the tractor, the seat had been replaced, and I don't see a spot to rea-add a seat switch, but the interlock bypass has worked in the past. The schematic (attached) indicates a brake / clutch switch, which I found (really tucked into a difficult-to-reach spot), and it seems to test fine -- open when the brake is off and closed / continuity when the brake is depressed.
Am I missing anything obvious, or am I down to the PTO switch or ignition? Any tips to test either or both of them? On the diagram where it shows circuits (ex: C + G for PTO off), does that mean I should see continuity across the C & G terminals? I guess that's the next step in diagnosing this.
Battery reads 14.6v, but the tractor fails to crank by the ignition key.
When I apply battery voltage to the starter solenoid trigger terminal (below), the starter turns the motor over, so I believe starter and solenoid are both ok.

Based on this, I expect the problem is in the ign switch, pto switch, or an interlock switch. The seat switch is jumped - when I bought the tractor, the seat had been replaced, and I don't see a spot to rea-add a seat switch, but the interlock bypass has worked in the past. The schematic (attached) indicates a brake / clutch switch, which I found (really tucked into a difficult-to-reach spot), and it seems to test fine -- open when the brake is off and closed / continuity when the brake is depressed.
Am I missing anything obvious, or am I down to the PTO switch or ignition? Any tips to test either or both of them? On the diagram where it shows circuits (ex: C + G for PTO off), does that mean I should see continuity across the C & G terminals? I guess that's the next step in diagnosing this.