• Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!

  • Microsoft MSN, Live, Hotmail, Outlook email users may not be receiving emails. We are working to resolve this issue. Please add support@steelsoldiers.com to your trusted contacts.

Sometime charges, sometimes not.

Razerface

New member
61
0
0
Location
Urbana, ohio
Sometimes when i start my 003a, the batt guage does not move, so i shut it back off and restart. That usually fixes it and it shows the batteries charging. Now today, no matter how many times i restart, the guage stays all the way to left,,,dead.

I am off to try toubleshooting with the charging sticky. Any ideas? How would i check the guage?

i am a terrible electrician
 
Last edited:

Wildchild467

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
2,052
57
48
Location
Milford / Michigan
Check your batteries with an actual meter instead of looking at the gauge. This will determine if the gauge is bad or if you have an actual charging system problem.
 

Wildchild467

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
2,052
57
48
Location
Milford / Michigan
Check the gauge by unplugging the one connector in the back. Use a jumper wire to ground the gauge and then use another jumper wire to apply the 24 volts to the electrical connection on the gauge itself. Sometimes the gauge might have a bad ground and that could cause an issue like you are describing. There is also a fuse for the charging system near the injection pump. You could check that to make sure that is in good shape as well and not corroded.
 

Razerface

New member
61
0
0
Location
Urbana, ohio
Took off the cover and did the charging system troubleshoot. Batteries fresh off maintainer.

batteries not running- 25.7vdc
Red wire- 25.6v
batteries running 25.7v
red wire running- 27.2v
leads from flywheel running- 23.2vac

stator is bad? Why would voltage go to 27.2 on red wire but not batteries? Stator is real low
 

Razerface

New member
61
0
0
Location
Urbana, ohio
I traced it into the cabinet. From there i am lost unless i cut all of the wire ties and make a mess. Anyone know where the red wire from the regulator connects in the cabinet?
 

Triple Jim

Well-known member
1,376
293
83
Location
North Carolina
If it's readable, yes. If not, the -34 TM has a similar one. All the wires are labeled well, so you can trace them by reading the labels, although it can be a little tedious.
 

Razerface

New member
61
0
0
Location
Urbana, ohio
Yes, with the end cover off, i was able to test voltage on both connectors on back of fuse holder. Both show 27.3 volt so juice is flowing thru the fuse.
 

Guyfang

Moderator
Staff member
Moderator
16,917
24,534
113
Location
Burgkunstadt, Germany
Sadly, I have only the ETM schematics to work off of, and they are BAD. But one side of the M-1 Meter, (Batt charging meter) should go to ground. The other side is hard to read, but it looks like it should go to TB-5, pin 4. From there it goes to the K-1 relay, terminal A1-4. Normally open contacts. When the start switch, (S-1) is held in the start position and K-1 gets energised. It causes the contacts (A1-3 and A1-4) to close, allowing power to flow from S-1 Pin 14, to the meter M-1 witch shows if the batteries are charging. So mesure what voltage you have in S-1, terminal 14, when the generator set is running. It should be the same as the battery voltage. If not, problem is between the control cabinet and batteries. If its the same,measure from K1-pin A1-4 to ground. Same voltage? Then measure from K1 pin A1-3 to ground. If the voltage is less, then K1 is bad. If the voltage is the same, (battery voltage) then measure from the terminal 1 on the M-1. Whats that voltage?
 

Razerface

New member
61
0
0
Location
Urbana, ohio
Whew! I have to work 12 hours today, but will try to understand and do this sunday. I am almost beat right now and still have a couple hours to go. Hopefully it will make sense after i stare at the schematics and the cabinet!
 

Guyfang

Moderator
Staff member
Moderator
16,917
24,534
113
Location
Burgkunstadt, Germany
Its not that hard. Look at the schematics, write things down. Go step for step. Helps if someone is there with you. A second set of hands, and two heads are better then one. You will get it.
 

Guyfang

Moderator
Staff member
Moderator
16,917
24,534
113
Location
Burgkunstadt, Germany
Testing The M1 meter
Start and operate generator set at rated voltage and frequency.
Release control panel by turning two fasteners and lower control panel slowly.
Set multimeter for DC volts and connect across BATTERY CHARGE ammeter terminals. Connect positive lead
to positive terminal and negative lead to negative terminal if you observe or think battery is charging. Multimeter
should indicate up to 50 mv (for example, 25 mv is equal to a +10 amps reading on BATTERY CHARGE ammeter).
Reverse multimeter leads if you obsere or think battery is discharging. Multimeter should indicate up to 25
mv (for example, 25 mv is equal to a –10 amps reading on BATTERY CHARGE ammeter).
If multimeter indicated millivolt reading and BATTERY CHARGE ammeter is not within =10% of equivalent
ampere reading, or is not indicating, replace BATTERY CHARGE ammeter.
Raise and secure control panel.
 

Razerface

New member
61
0
0
Location
Urbana, ohio
Looks like it does charge. If you wait a few minutes after it is started, the voltage on batteries comes up very slowly. I have the cover off of the flywheel. I am thinking the stator should be replaced or at least cleaned since its output numbers are very low. True?
 

Triple Jim

Well-known member
1,376
293
83
Location
North Carolina
What's the output current of the charging system? You can measure it at the fuse pretty easily by taking it out and putting the ammeter leads on the two solder tabs on the fuse holder. If the fan shroud is on, you can probably take off the fuse cap, put the fuse back in without the cap, and complete the circuit with one ammeter lead on the end of the fuse and the other on the metal contact around it.

The behavior you described is normal: The battery voltage slowly rises after starting the engine, and it can easily take an hour or two to get the voltage up to 28. The system puts out only around 7 amps or so as I remember, so it's nothing like a car's system that dumps 100 amps into the battery and gets the voltage back up over 14 almost immediately after starting.
 
Top
AdBlock Detected

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!

I've Disabled AdBlock
No Thanks