โMay-16-2016 08:00 AM
โMay-17-2016 11:12 AM
โMay-17-2016 11:06 AM
Moffittclan wrote:Clicking is a good sign but DOESN'T mean there is electrical contact. A common failure is pitted/corroded contacts inside the solenoid. The solenoid requires continual power to engage and either your alternator or charger provide that power. It's also common for the charger to NOT charge the chassis battery and the solenoid remains off on shore power.
can I jumper from the battery directly to one of the smaller terminals to test the solenoid? If I understand them correctly, applying voltage to one of the small terminals (the one NOT the ground) should engage the solenoid and I should hear it click...If it does click, then my problem would be somewhere else (like the ignition sensing circuit or something)???
Sound about right?
โMay-17-2016 10:29 AM
โMay-17-2016 06:11 AM
Moffittclan wrote:
can I jumper from the battery directly to one of the smaller terminals to test the solenoid? If I understand them correctly, applying voltage to one of the small terminals (the one NOT the ground) should engage the solenoid and I should hear it click...If it does click, then my problem would be somewhere else (like the ignition sensing circuit or something)???
Sound about right?
โMay-17-2016 05:23 AM
โMay-17-2016 05:10 AM
Moffittclan wrote:Chris Bryant wrote:
That is the right solenoid. The only other test is voltage at the third small terminal- could have two small terminals, one would be ground then. That is an intermittent duty solenoid, but the controller cuts the hold voltage down, so you won't get full voltage at the small terminal all the time.
Small terminals had about .6 volts on each I think...might have to check again in the morning...what should it be?
โMay-17-2016 04:07 AM
โMay-16-2016 09:47 PM
โMay-16-2016 09:02 PM
โMay-16-2016 05:54 PM
Chris Bryant wrote:
That is the right solenoid. The only other test is voltage at the third small terminal- could have two small terminals, one would be ground then. That is an intermittent duty solenoid, but the controller cuts the hold voltage down, so you won't get full voltage at the small terminal all the time.
โMay-16-2016 05:53 PM
Chris Bryant wrote:
That is the right solenoid. The only other test is voltage at the third small terminal- could have two small terminals, one would be ground then. That is an intermittent duty solenoid, but the controller cuts the hold voltage down, so you won't get full voltage at the small terminal all the time.
โMay-16-2016 04:07 PM
โMay-16-2016 03:05 PM
โMay-16-2016 01:15 PM