thank you for the response I will double check the pins tomorrow and I'll also test the voltage if I have the correct ones. were you able to find the information in regards to getting the motor fired up or should I just keep on with the relays?
That is what the information I just gave you is for
Relay K19 when de-energized, passes 24V from CB79 down to the run solenoid on the governor, which allows it to deliver fuel and the engine to run. When you turn off the main switch, the power supplied to CB79 is removed and the solenoid releases, shutting down the engine By cutting it’s fuel.
The start inhibit button on the left of the power panel, energizes K19(which latches), cutting off the power down to that run solenoid, so you get engine crank with no startup for maintenance testing… After the start inhibit button is pushed K19 stays energized/latched until you cycle the main power switch off.
If K19 isn’t a 5 pin, the truck wont start. If it is a 5 pin relay and 24V is making it to pin 30, I would plug the 5 pin back in and then look for that same 24V on one of the wires connected to the solenoid on the rear of the governor. The other wire must have a path to ground to complete the current pathway that energizes the solenoid. You should also be able to hear/feel it go clunk when the main switch is turned on/24v applied.
Their decision to use 4 types of relays(12 and 24, 4 and 5 pin) in the panel was really silly. You can cut that down to just 2 types by only getting 5 pin relays in both 12 and 24v as 5 pin relays will plug in and operate in all the sockets just fine… A 4 pin relay in the wrong place will cause this problem, failure to crank, keep the alternator from coming online and a few other annoyances…