Fordfarmer
Well-known Member
What would typical - or acceptable - resistance be in an ignition switch?
Working on my Claas Dominator 106 combine on a Won't Crank issue. (Figured the post would get more views here than in the combine forum...and it isn't really a combine specific question) Has an on/off ignition switch and a push button start switch. Found a burned wire just behind the ignition switch. Maybe a bad crimp? Only looks bad right near the connector. Going to check for bare wire/shorts anyway. Back to the switch. It doesn't look like it was affected by the wire getting hot. The connector came off the tab on the switch - it hadn't gotten welded on by the heat. With a multimeter, I get no continuity with the switch off (as expected), and 0.7 ohms with the switch on. Acceptable, or is that going to make heat and increase the amp draw?
It's a diesel, so other than starting, I think the only power that might go through the switch is for the dash lights and gauges.
Working on my Claas Dominator 106 combine on a Won't Crank issue. (Figured the post would get more views here than in the combine forum...and it isn't really a combine specific question) Has an on/off ignition switch and a push button start switch. Found a burned wire just behind the ignition switch. Maybe a bad crimp? Only looks bad right near the connector. Going to check for bare wire/shorts anyway. Back to the switch. It doesn't look like it was affected by the wire getting hot. The connector came off the tab on the switch - it hadn't gotten welded on by the heat. With a multimeter, I get no continuity with the switch off (as expected), and 0.7 ohms with the switch on. Acceptable, or is that going to make heat and increase the amp draw?
It's a diesel, so other than starting, I think the only power that might go through the switch is for the dash lights and gauges.