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Lost electrical power - Follow up

carter262

Member
152
11
18
Location
NC
I was driving to my dad's in my 1984 M1009, original electrical system, and the radio began cutting out, loss of power, then cut back on. Then the low coolant light began to flicker on then off. Next the Gen 1 light would come on for a second and then go off. The Gen 1 light only did this twice. Volt meter was showing charging in the green where it is supposed to be. Pulled into Dad's driveway and the truck died. Now there is no power when you cut the key on. No lights cycle, no blower fan going, no radio, no starter turning over.

Checked all fuses: none blown.
Checked the starter relay under dash (doghead upgrade): if i hold a screwdriver between the two post the truck turns over and no start.
Checked battery cables: all tight
All wires to generators tight.
Headlights still work.

I am at a loss and stuck 25 miles from home, any ideas?
 

Assel

Member
197
7
16
Location
Germany Schwarzwald-Baar
Are your batteries both in good condition? can you be sure your batterie cables are good, they can rot inside and you wont notice from the outside. Are your mass contacts good?

you could try to hook a slave cable from the engine block to the - of your front batterie. Of course with no elektric power the truck wont run or start, the shutoff solenoid on the IP wont let diesel flow to the pump (its the pink wire in front of your air-cleaner)

to me this sounds like a bad ground..or is your ignition switch totally worn out? I think my headlights do work without the key in.
 

carter262

Member
152
11
18
Location
NC
Are your batteries both in good condition? can you be sure your batterie cables are good, they can rot inside and you wont notice from the outside. Are your mass contacts good?

you could try to hook a slave cable from the engine block to the - of your front batterie. Of course with no elektric power the truck wont run or start, the shutoff solenoid on the IP wont let diesel flow to the pump (its the pink wire in front of your air-cleaner)

to me this sounds like a bad ground..or is your ignition switch totally worn out? I think my headlights do work without the key in.
Batteries are good. Cables are a few years old not the originals. Ignition switch was changed out APPROX 4 years ago. Battery cables are not bolt on ones.
 

SgtHaas

Member
91
0
6
Location
Augusta Maine
Check your pos. & neg. distribution point on the firewall. Clean and tighten up and if possible add di-electric to it . I have had similar experiences.
 

royalflush55

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
653
533
93
Location
Reydon, OK
I would check all fusible links. Sounds like it could be one that connects to the 12 volt diamond in the middle of the firewall.
 

Warthog

Moderator
Super Moderator
Steel Soldiers Supporter
13,774
232
63
Location
OKC, OK
While you say the batteries are good have you actually tested them today? I have seen brand new batteries fail.
 

carter262

Member
152
11
18
Location
NC
Did this M1009 ever get back on the road again? Any updates?
Yea, I'm sorry about that. I did get her fixed and should of posted an update. I promise to be better next time. :sad:

Here is what I found and this was by pure accident. The small block, 12 volt diamond, on the fire wall that is located at the glow plug solenoid had a wire that had separated from the ring connector that was attached to it. The wire was attached to the left stud, was red with orange fusible link, and runs from the 12 volt diamond to the left bottom quadrant of the fuse block (in engine compartment).

When it came apart the wire did not fall down and was still touching the ring connector which kept the truck running. When I would hit a bump or step on the throttle I believe it would make the wire move and loose contact, this is what was causing the lights to flicker. When the wire made contact again everything went back to normal. When the wire was not making contact nothing worked when you turned the key, so my strong powers of deduction tell me that that red wire feeds the ignition switch and dash.

Like I said I found it by accident. I tested everything I could think of so I moved on to wiring. I turned key into on position and started checking wiring under the hood. While I was checking the wires going into the fuse block power came on. I started the truck and shut it off. I then put the key back in the on position and started looking the exact problem wire figuring I was going to be replacing a wire feeding the fuse block. As I was wiggling individual wires trying to get the power to cut off again to identify the problem wire I noticed the wire fall out of the corner of my eye and the power went out. Hummm, I believe I found it.

So that was the long version of a short story. Thanks for the help and advise!
 
Last edited:

frank8003

In Memorial
In Memorial
6,426
4,985
113
Location
Ft. Lauderdale, Florida
Yea, I'm sorry about that. I did get her fixed and should of posted an update. I promise to be better next time. ~So that was the long version of a short story. Thanks for the help and advise!
and my favorite "Do or Do Not, there is no try" ~ Yoda

Anyhow, goto the March 2016 Hotrod magazine page 104.
It contains the best advice about electrical connections in our old vehicles.
Especially page 108. I can't post others work.
 

royalflush55

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
653
533
93
Location
Reydon, OK
Yea, I'm sorry about that. I did get her fixed and should of posted an update. I promise to be better next time. :sad:

Here is what I found and this was by pure accident. The small block on the fire wall that is located at the glow plug solenoid had a wire that had separated from the ring connector that was attached to it. The wire was attached to the left stud, was red with orange fusible link, and runs from this block to the left bottom quadrant of the fuse block (in engine compartment).

When it came apart the wire did not fall down and was still touching the ring connector which kept the truck running. When I would hit a bump or step on the throttle I believe it would make the wire move and loose contact, this is what was causing the lights to flicker. When the wire made contact again everything went back to normal. When the wire was not making contact nothing worked when you turned the key, so my strong powers of deduction tell me that that red wire feeds the ignition switch and dash.

Like I said I found it by accident. I tested everything I could think of so I moved on to wiring. I turned key into on position and started checking wiring under the hood. While I was checking the wires going into the fuse block power came on. I started the truck and shut it off. I then put the key back in the on position and started looking the exact problem wire figuring I was going to be replacing a wire feeding the fuse block. As I was wiggling individual wires trying to get the power to cut off again to identify the problem wire I noticed the wire fall out of the corner of my eye and the power went out. Hummm, I believe I found it.

So that was the long version of a short story. Thanks for the help and advise!
Ok, good. This is the 12 volt diamond in the middle of the firewall I was talking about!
 

kcbbqguru

New member
89
0
0
Location
kansas city
I would check all fusible links. Sounds like it could be one that connects to the 12 volt diamond in the middle of the firewall.
do you have a pic of the 12 volt diamond? I had kind of the same problem, but it happened when I turned the key to start, it turned over one time, then nothing lost all power to dash?
 
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