DeereJohn1
Member
My new to me 720 LP has one set of battery cable under the seat - I assume it used just 1 12 volt battery? Can anyone tell me the correct coil part number from Napa, O'Reilly's etc?
Thanks
Thanks
Thank you!Hello DeereJohn1, welcome to YT! From another member @Jim.ME posted for the same question for a 3020 but should be the same since both are 12 volts.
“Standard Motor Products UC 15 and NAPA IC 14 are both shown as 12-volt coils that require no external resistor.”
I am nearly certain his information is correct.
wrong, the LP spark ignition 12V tractor use bypass starting .Hello DeereJohn1, welcome to YT! From another member @Jim.ME posted for the same question for a 3020 but should be the same since both are 12 volts.
“Standard Motor Products UC 15 and NAPA IC 14 are both shown as 12-volt coils that require no external resistor.”
I am nearly certain his information is correct.
Okay, sorry for the misinformation. I suspect if you had the NAPA part number he wanted you would have posted it.wrong, the LP spark ignition 12V tractor use bypass starting .
Should I use a 12 volt since that’s the battery voltage?Standard UC 14 or ECHLIN IC 7 are 6-volt coils, cross from some JD part numbers, and should work with the starting bypass.
Not if the original resistor is still in the ignition system wiring. The resistor allows the 6-volt coil to work on 12 volts. The resistor also allows for the resistor bypass circuit to work when starting. That circuit provides full battery voltage to the ignition during starting. If you still have the original resistor (located as TheBartman47 posted) in the circuit, you need to use a 6-volt coil.Should I use a 12 volt since that’s the battery voltage?
Good to know. Thank you!Not if the original resistor is still in the ignition system wiring. The resistor allows the 6-volt coil to work on 12 volts. The resistor also allows for the resistor bypass circuit to work when starting. That circuit provides full battery voltage to the ignition during starting. If you still have the original resistor (located as TheBartman47 posted) in the circuit, you need to use a 6-volt coil.
You need to determine if the resistor is still in the circuit.
I zoomed in on some photos I took - is this the resistor? If so, does this verify a 6 volt coil with external resistor?Not if the original resistor is still in the ignition system wiring. The resistor allows the 6-volt coil to work on 12 volts. The resistor also allows for the resistor bypass circuit to work when starting. That circuit provides full battery voltage to the ignition during starting. If you still have the original resistor (located as TheBartman47 posted) in the circuit, you need to use a 6-volt coil.
You need to determine if the resistor is still in the circuit.
Good to know. Thank you!
I zoomed in on some photos I took - is this the resistor? If so, does this verify a 6 volt coil with external resistor?
I do not, but plan to order - ok to use a 6 volt coil that says "No external resistor needed" or does it require one that says "External resistor required"That appears to be the resistor in question. A 6-volt coil would be used with it.
Do you have Service and Operator's manuals for your tractor?
Did we not mention by-pass starting ?Should I use a 12 volt since that’s the battery voltage?
Need a coil that measures roughly 1.5ohms across the primary windings .I do not, but plan to order - ok to use a 6 volt coil that says "No external resistor needed" or does it require one that says "External resistor required"
I don't know why they started adding that wording on the 6-volt coils. When that coil is used on a 6-volt system it does not need an external resistor to be used with it. If you use it on a 12-volt system, it needs an external resistor.I do not, but plan to order - ok to use a 6 volt coil that says "No external resistor needed" or does it require one that says "External resistor required"
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