I can’t tell for certain but is the bridge that holds the gauge in aluminum or pot metal as so like to call it? Those studs would need insulated sleeves in their holes was there anything like that? This could very well be the source of the short in your wiring. This probably would not have cause the field wiring to burn but one never knows. Show us a picture of the “other gauge” explain why metal would lead you to not use it? Maybe it is an appearance thing?Pulled ammeter off it is all plastic and rubber washers but I just broke off the needle. My other ammeter is metal so, don't want to use it.View attachment 125938


If you are unaware, Jesse/JMOR passed away back in July. There's an entry down on the Memorial PageI still have the cut out but Jmor had me remove it when helping me with rewire and wire colored differently but it started.
I may have done more damage to that regulator than smoking a FLD wire which I fixed.
If it goes from the generator's ground terminal to the same ground as the regulator, it is right.Okay. I did replace that resistor, it's new. I'll try it tomorrow
You know my black wire ground from
GEN goes to battery box and REG box on side of tractor. Could ground be wrong place?
"You should say what terminal of the generator it is hooked to, not just saying black wire from generator."If it goes from the generator's ground terminal to the same ground as the regulator, it is right.
You should say what terminal of the generator it is hooked to, not just saying black wire from generator.
Ok, my error."You should say what terminal of the generator it is hooked to, not just saying black wire from generator."
The O.P. has that info covered in his photo of the generator in Post #17 of this thread
I know Jim.ME is trying to get an over-all assessment of what you have going on. But could you please answer what the part I circled is made from. Is it some kind of metal that would conduct electricity? If so this could be one of higher possible causes of your short to chassis ground (causing the sparking when you were connecting your battery.I can’t tell for certain but is the bridge that holds the gauge in aluminum or pot metal as so like to call it? Those studs would need insulated sleeves in their holes was there anything like that? This could very well be the source of the short in your wiring. This probably would not have cause the field wiring to burn but one never knows. Show us a picture of the “other gauge” explain why metal would lead you to not use it? Maybe it is an appearance thing?
Yes, it is all plastic except threads and magnet in between, the whole needle piece is plastic, only th cap is metal but doesn't touch body.I know Jim.ME is trying to get an over-all assessment of what you have going on. But could you please answer what the part I circled is made from. Is it some kind of metal that would conduct electricity? If so this could be one of higher possible causes of your short to chassis ground (causing the sparking when you were connecting your battery.
EDIT: In further review I see you may have answered in reply 40 but not real clearly. I took the way you said “all plastic” as meaning the body of the gauge is plastic. I suppose you could mean the gauge and bridge are both plastic. Sorry, for the misunderstanding.

Did you check to see if the junction terminal stud was touching behind the block as I suggested in post #48? Check it, if only to rule it out.Agree , need to figure + voltage ground feed path from starter wire to battery negative seems to have direct short to chassis I'm thinking?
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