radara4077
Member
I have a 2950 SoundGard I bought back in the fall, and it's spent the winter in various states of dis-assembly as I'm getting it ready for the hay field this summer. The "proofmeter" doesn't work on it (the cluster gauge that shows the hours and the engine RPMs). When our mechanic had the radiator off a few weeks ago, we spent the $30 or so for a new sending unit that mounts on the front of the engine that's supposed to go to the proofmeter.
That didn't fix the problem.
I've read on here and other places that the circuit board under the dash of these tractors is notorious for causing problems. Could it be the culprit? I suppose it could also be any myriad of connections, wires (it looks like spaghetti in there when you take off the dash cowl), or even the gauge itself (Deere wants around $600 for a new one).
Is there a way to bypass the circuit board? Would an aftermarket gauge be able to interpret the signal coming from the sending unit without the board? I'm extremely out of my depth when it comes to the type of electrical system on this tractor. Give me a simple 12 volt conversion for an 841 Ford and I'm good to go, but something like this...I've no clue.
We do have the full technical manual for this tractor, which includes several pages of in-depth wiring diagrams (although my ability to interpret those is severely lacking), so I can reference that along with any replies to this post, if the need arises.
Thank you all for your help!
That didn't fix the problem.
I've read on here and other places that the circuit board under the dash of these tractors is notorious for causing problems. Could it be the culprit? I suppose it could also be any myriad of connections, wires (it looks like spaghetti in there when you take off the dash cowl), or even the gauge itself (Deere wants around $600 for a new one).
Is there a way to bypass the circuit board? Would an aftermarket gauge be able to interpret the signal coming from the sending unit without the board? I'm extremely out of my depth when it comes to the type of electrical system on this tractor. Give me a simple 12 volt conversion for an 841 Ford and I'm good to go, but something like this...I've no clue.
We do have the full technical manual for this tractor, which includes several pages of in-depth wiring diagrams (although my ability to interpret those is severely lacking), so I can reference that along with any replies to this post, if the need arises.
Thank you all for your help!