tim292stro
Well-known member
- 2,118
- 41
- 48
- Location
- S.F. Bay Area/California
Start with a resistance check before pulling them.
Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!
Let's take it all the way back to the basics.
So the pink/black wire is getting 11.98 volts. Batteries together measured 24.5 and alone they were good. Don't have a min/max feature on my meter, and I haven't had a chance to bring them in. Was I supposed to take the green wire off the injector while the pink/black wire was grounded or just with the card out? I did both with the ignition on "run", but I heard no click. I could hear the pump working, but no click. Am I doing this right? I also noticed that the engine ground wire (i'm guessing that's what it is?) was melted, but mainly intact. I replaced that wire with the proper gauge and cleaned the terminals (also cleaned all the other terminals/grounds you suggested). If you look at this picture you can see how it slightly melted one side of the harness/plug that connects to the fuel filter. I inspected it and it doesn't look like the wires are separated inside. Either way, no click and not quite 12 volts.With the engine cold, pull the GP card, turn the key to run, and measure the voltage on the pink/black wire to the GP relay (one of the little wires) to ground.
- Pink/black terminal of the GP relay should measure at the same voltage as the 12V battery.
- Remove the green wire from the fuel shutoff solenoid on the injection pump - there should be a substantial "click". Reconnect it and there should be another substantial "click"
- If the above two bullet tests true, short the light-blue wire terminal of the GP relay to ground for the time specified below (there should be a good "clunk" when you do this):
- Ambient temperature <32F = 35 seconds
- Ambient temperature 32F to 50F = 25 seconds
- Ambient temperature >50F = 20 seconds
Cold (slower chemical reaction, freezing damage), sitting (self discharging), over-charging (water boil-off), undercharging (sulfation), dirt corrosion on the terminals... There's a huge list of ways to kill a battery or significantly shorten its life....Is there a way I could be frying these batteries so soon?
That, plus the GP relay chatter you described in post #24, is sounding like a bad chassis ground....Lately my gen 2 light comes on and off as I let of the gas, but tightening the belts usually fixes that. I rebuilt the alternators with a kit 2 years ago, but maybe I should test them to see if they could be overcharging or something?
We get it, advertisements are annoying!
Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website like our supporting vendors. Their ads help keep Steel Soldiers going. Please consider disabling your ad blockers for the site. Thanks!