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Farmall & IHC Tractors Discussion Forum
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H generator

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ryanfisher

03-23-2007 08:15:19




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have a 47 h, and the battery is always going dead after i drive around and want to start it the next day. dad thinks generator, but also the lights worked 1 day (flickered on and then off) but nothing else. i really want them working cuz it'd be cool plowing at 8:00pm and having the original 6volt lights on. could generator be out on it, and if so, how to test it and where to get work done or could i do it my self(with what tools)?? thanks

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John T

03-23-2007 12:58:41




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 Re: H generator in reply to ryanfisher, 03-23-2007 08:15:19  
TROUBLESHOOTING CHARGING SYSTEMS

ARE YOU SURE THE AMMETER IS WIRED CORRECT AND WORKS????? If you turn the lights or ignition on (if coil ignition not a mag) when she’s not running, the ammeter should swing over to the - discharge direction, does yours??? Are BOTH the ammeter terminals reading hot battery voltage?? They MUST !!!!! ! There’s but one wire on the ammeters Supply (from battery/starter) terminal while its other Load terminal wires to the BAT terminal on a Cutout relay or VR PLUS wires to feed loads like lights or ignition, unless where a 4 terminal VR is used where lights n ignition are fed from the LOAD terminal on the VR.

To Polarize the Generator, first temporarily dead ground the Gens Field post to case/frame, then momentarily flash jump a wire from the Cutout Relay or VR's "BAT" terminal over to its GEN (or ARM) terminal and you ought to get a small spark. Same things accomplished by momentarily flash jumping a hot wire (BAT terminal on Cutout Relay or VR or starter post etc) direct to the Gens ARM post to get the spark.

TROUBLESHOOTING A CHARGING PROBLEM IN CLASS A DELCO TYPE SYSTEMS

1) For a good working Gen to get to and charge the battery, it has to have a path usually from the Gens ARM post,,,,, ,,,,to and through the Cutout Relay (between its GEN and BAT terminals, regardless if on a VR or Relay),,,,, ,,,up to the Load (NOT to battery) side of the Ammeter,,,,, ,,,to and through the Ammeter,,,,, ,,,,from BAT side of Ammeter to ungrounded battery terminal, often via the starter lug post. Is yours wired that way or equivalent ??? The ammeter should read hot battery voltage on BOTH terminals, does yours??? Even if an ammeter were stuck (but still continuous) as RPM increases the battery voltage should rise from 12.6 to near 14 volts and/or the lights glow brighter (half that on 6 volt systems). Have you tried that in case the ammeter isn’t working right?????

2) If the above is so, the BAT terminal on the VR or Cutout Relay MUST ALWAYS READ HOT BATTERY VOLTAGE. Does yours??? If not, the Gen cant get to and charge the battery.

3) The Gen to VR (if it has one) wiring is as follows:

BAT on VR to ammeters load (NOT battery) side

ARM (or GEN) on VR to Gens Armature post.

FLD on VR to Gens Field post.

(L) Load (if you have a 4 wire VR) up to BAT supply input terminal on switch to feed loads like lights and ignition.

WIRING ON CUTOUT RELAYS: They wire BAT side to ammeters Load terminal,,,,, GEN side to gens Armature post. On cutout relay systems, the Gens Field post is wired to the light switch where it gets a dead ground for high charge or a resistive ground for low charge. Therefore, there must be a good connection from the Gens Field post up to the switch PLUS the switch is good and it’s well grounded !!!!! !!

4. THE GEN AND VR OR CUTOUT RELAY MUST BE WELL GROUNDED AND THE BELT GOOD N TIGHT. If any doubt, run a ground wire from the grounded battery post or clean solid frame member direct to the Gen and see what happens????? ????? ????? ????? ????

NOW, if the Gen and VR are grounded,,,,,all is wired correct,,,,, ,,BAT terminal on VR or Cutout Relay is HOT,,,,, ,,Belt is tight,,,,, ,,,Ammeter is good n continuous n works but she wont charge, have you had the batteries tested lately????? Is there electrolyte above all the plates and no cells have a gray or milky appearance????? A bad battery may not accept a charge you know!!!!! !! If the battery checks okay, proceed below to see if its a Gen or VR problem (AFTER you have insured the wiring per the above)

TO DETERMINE IF ITS A GEN OR VR OR CUTOUT RELAY PROBLEM

5. a) VOLTAGE REGULATOR SYSTEM: With the tractor running, temporarily ground the Gens Field post to case. If she charges then but NOT otherwise, the VR may be bad, or a wires missing from VR's Field post to the Field terminal on the VR, or the VR isn’t well grounded.

b) IF IT’S A CUTOUT RELAY SYSTEM and she charges only if you dead ground the Field but NOT otherwise, its either a bad switch or the switch isn’t well grounded or else the wires bad or open from the Gens Field post up to the switch. INSURE THAT GOOD SWITCH GROUND AND WIRING

6. If she still don’t charge, leave the Field grounded and jump a wire across from the VR or Cutout Relays BAT terminal over to its GEN terminal (jump by passes the cutout relay) and see if she charges. If then but not otherwise, a VR's cutout relay isn’t working correct (maybe points burned/carboned) or a Cutout Relays NOT working or not wired correct.

7. With the 2 steps above, you have basically by passed the VR or Cutout relays functions, so if she still don’t charge, you're left with a bad battery or wiring or the Gen itself.

8. MOTOR TEST. You can Motor test the Gen. If its grounded and you remove the belt and apply hot battery voltage direct to its ARM Post and have the Field Post dead grounded to frame, it should motor n run well (Armature n Brushes and Commutator likely okay). Then, if you next remove the Fields ground and it speeds up some, the Fields probably good. If it passes both those tests, it should charge, and if not, it may be a wiring or battery or grounding problem. The hot battery voltage may be taken off the VR's BAT terminal or the starter post or the battery itself for this test.

9. Typical Gen problems may be the brushes are worn down or the hold down spring assemblies are stuck/corroded/dirty and arent pushing the brushes tight down against the commutator. Check those things out. Worse may be bad fields or armature etc. Air and WD 40 etc can clean and free them, the hold downs must be free n snap and hold the brushes DOWN TIGHT and they cant be worn down too low.

SUMMARY: Check the wiring,,,,,the grounds,,,,, insure BAT on VR or Relay is hot,,,,, ,check battery (maybe load tested and Specific Gravity checked),,,,, ,,,good tight belt,,,,, ,insure ammeter is continuous (BOTH sides HOT),,,,, see if battery voltage rises above 12.6 (half that for 6 volt system) and/or light glow brighter,,,,, ,,,do the Field and cutout relay VR by pass checks,,,,, ,,insure the Gens brushes arent worn down and the hold down springs are free n clean and push the brushes down tight,,,,, ,,,,,check the connections,,,,, ,,,try the Gen Motor Test to see if its good.

You may just have a bad battery or bad ground or connection if the Gen and VR or relay are okay. Good Luck n God Bless, let us all know.

John T Nordhoff in Indiana, retired electrical engineer who usually lurks over on the Mother Deere pages instead of over here on the "dark side" lol

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bihl

03-23-2007 12:21:31




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 Re: H generator in reply to ryanfisher, 03-23-2007 08:15:19  
Link Its a little more that a dimmer



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Nat 2

03-23-2007 10:52:17




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 Re: H generator in reply to ryanfisher, 03-23-2007 08:15:19  
There should be an ammeter in the electrical box on the steering post. If the needle moves to the right of center while the tractor is running, it's charging.

Broken ammeter? Replace it. You can't successfully monitor and troubleshoot a generator or regulator problem unless you have a working ammeter.

Wiring looks like a rotten rat's nest? Replace it. You can't successfully troubleshoot bad wiring.

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gene bender

03-23-2007 10:28:54




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 Re: H generator in reply to ryanfisher, 03-23-2007 08:15:19  
Quick and simple test. Ground the field and if it charges on the ammeter the reg is bad. If grounding the field doesent show any charge the gen is bad. Also chech the voltage with engine off and then check again with engine running. If voltage doesent increase when engine is running the gen is at fault.



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Bob M

03-23-2007 09:13:45




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 Re: H generator in reply to ryanfisher, 03-23-2007 08:15:19  
Punch on the link below. At the bottom right corner of the page there's links to generator troubleshooting charts for both cut-out (older) and voltage regulator (later) equipped Farmall letter-series tractors. Pick the one that's appropriate for your system and follow it through.

----

>i really want them working cuz it'd be cool plowing at 8:00pm and having the original 6volt lights on.
>

Having spent MANY hours in my youth plowing, etc using 6 volt tractor lights, it's not something I'd really care to do again. Imagine trying to wrench under the hood of your car with with only a candle for illumination - those old Farmall lights are not much better!

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chadd

03-23-2007 11:17:55




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 Re: H generator in reply to Bob M, 03-23-2007 09:13:45  
Wow, Bob M, you and I both think alike. I like the 6 volt system for its simplicity, but I have never considered the 6 volt lights "cool." Personally, I like to actually see something more than 3 feet in front of the tractor!!! About the only reason I turn the lights on at night are so that the other tractors (806, 966, or M) in the same field don't run over me on the W6. All I can say is that compared to my father's plowing, my plowing is bad enough with the 12V lights. I don't think I could even imagine how uneven it would look with the 6V lights!!!

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Bob M

03-23-2007 11:30:29




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 Re: H generator in reply to chadd, 03-23-2007 11:17:55  
You should experience running a 2 row mounted corn picker, or operating a 2 row bean puller under those 6 volt lights!

Now I agree they throw enough light so someone else in the field will see you/not run you over. But they're marginal for anything else...

Incidentally I always wondered why IHC bothered with the "Dim" setting on the light switch. All I can figure is it was some sort of twisted joke by a disgruntled IHC electrical engineer. (They should have been labelled "Dim" and "Even Dimmer"!)

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El Toro

03-23-2007 12:46:30




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 Re: H generator in reply to Bob M, 03-23-2007 11:30:29  
We had a 1939 Ford when I started driving and the lights on it were terrible too. That's one thing that has improved over the years. Hal



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Bob M

03-23-2007 17:15:26




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 Re: H generator in reply to El Toro, 03-23-2007 12:46:30  
Hal - That brings back a memory!:

We had a mid-50's IHC farm dump with 6 volt electrics and a 2 speed electric rear axle. The axle shifted OK with the lights off. But with the lights on it shifted very slow or not at all. To shift the axle when driving after dark one had to first push in the light switch, then operate the 2 speed button and wait for the axle to shift, and finally pull the lights back on. Didn't think much of it at the time. But in retrospect it was half crazy...

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Roger Mills

03-23-2007 08:46:41




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 Re: H generator in reply to ryanfisher, 03-23-2007 08:15:19  
Does the ammeter show charge or discharge when running above idle?? If charging---bad battery, if discharging---gen or cutout. Try point file on cutout contacts, if that doesn't help then probably no gen output--brushes or badly worn commutator, if so take gen to shop.



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bihl

03-23-2007 10:07:39




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 Re: H generator in reply to Roger Mills, 03-23-2007 08:46:41  
if tractor has a distributer disco battery with tractor running, if it dies its the gener. if it cont. to run it is the battery. This will only work with a dist. type tractor not a mag setup.



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brainerd dave

03-23-2007 08:37:01




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 Re: H generator in reply to ryanfisher, 03-23-2007 08:15:19  
It's cooler plowing with 12V lights. You can actually see where you're going.
Any alternator/generator repair shop can test your generator for you and repair it if need be.



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