k0ua
Epic Contributor
The fuse was blown - not sure why. The two metal bands in the fuse would make contact when I rattled the wire - thus starting. When I went out yesterday morning the battery was down to 4v and no dash lights no matter how hard I wiggled the wires. I stopped into my local auto parts store and they had the fuse - actually same manufacturer too! I brought it home used the grease and it started(battery was charging this morning). I pulled apart every connection I could reach and greased.
The two fuses(extra one) with tax was just under 20 bucks - ouch! I will take the loader off to access other wires as per spring maintenance noted above.
I looked for a wire that could be worn and had shorted out but found nothing. Any ideas regarding why it would have blown?
Thanks.
What I am about to tell you may or may not be the problem.. And you may not be able to tell. BUT. look at any blown fuse very carefully, I mean really examine it.. to tell if it blew instantaneously with the element gone and possible black marks inside indicating a serious current overload. Or is it just barely melted and sagged just a little in the middle but the element is still all there, just not quite making continuity, then it could have opened from many years of use and just a little overload one time or just was operated at the near limits for a long time.. Or if the element looks intact but when wiggles or jiggled, it moves, but does not appear to have ever really been hot, the fuse can fail from metal/vibration fatigue. No electrical overload at all, just vibration cracked the element. Now you might not be able to tell from just a cursory look at a fuse what happened, but sometimes you can.