Tractor issue

buckdeer1

Well-Known Member
So my battery keeps going dead and my old battery was at least 6 years old so I figured with the cold it went bad so I replaced.A week later the new one was bad.I know I must have a draw but theres not much to do it. I charged battery and left ground unhooked.I don't have electric but do have solar so I am going to try using a battery maintainer but don't know how it will work on solar.Anyone had shorted wire issue or power draw issue. I got JD because I was hoping to avoid chewed wires because they make their wire insulation out of petroleum products instead of like most cars that are soybean oil or something similar.
 
If the old battery went six years without issue, seems odd that new battery would go dead from a draw. Have you done a load test on the new onYou could have just got a bad one?
 
It could be a bad new battery, or the issue could have occurred when the old battery was installed which could have been the death blow to it and is what is draining your new battery.

Of course your best option is to find the draw and fix it, but there are some alternatives. I'm presuming this is a slow draw and takes a week or so to drain the battery. If it does dead in a day or two you need to find and fix the issue. One way to track down the issue is to pull all but one fuse and see if the battery dies over a week or so. If no, insert another fuse and wait and watch again. Eventually you will find the circuit that is causing the drain.

One option is to put a switch between your battery and fuse box. A slow drain is likely coming from an accessory or something that is powered out of that fuse box. You simply switch off power to the fuse box when your done using the tractor.

Another is a maintainer/charger. I have power, so I actually put cheap maintainers/chargers on all off my cars, trucks, tractors, UTVs, and such. I simply wire them with an easy to access power connector. I then plug the charger into that port when not in use. Sometimes my equipment sits and a lead-acid battery will naturally drain slowly over time. Keeping a lead-acid battery at a low state of charge for a long period will significantly shorten the lifespan.

While I don't use solar chargers on my equipment, I do use them on my camera system. You need to buy a PWM or MPPT solar charge controller. It will connect to your solar panel on one end and then have an output to connect to your battery. You will need to find the appropriate cabling for your charger. Most take a stripped wire end held with a set screw for connections. Personally, I would wire an SAE power connector to your tractor battery and put one on the wire from the solar charge controller. This makes hookup easy. Personally, I put blaze orange flagging tape on this power cord and drape it over the tractor cowling so I don't accidently drive off without removing it.

I think MPPT charge controllers are a little better than PWM. You can get them for about $25. You should not need more than 10 amps if you are just charging a tractor battery and have good sun. I'd suggest doing this for cold weather whether you find and fix the power draw or not.
 
I guess I should check the new battery,so I will test first and then maybe try the fuses.I did order a maintainer and I can plug 110V into my solar so I am hoping if I have to use it it will not draw too much
 
I guess I should check the new battery,so I will test first and then maybe try the fuses.I did order a maintainer and I can plug 110V into my solar so I am hoping if I have to use it it will not draw too much
If you are using a solar panel, you don't want that kind of maintainer. You want a Solar Charge Controller, MPPT. It will do the job. Either return that maintainer or use it in some other application.
 
I have a solar controller on my system,thats how I have 110V lights

Ok, there is a lot of loss going from solar DC through an inverter to AC, then back to DC for a charger. If you already have a solar system that has sufficient power for that, while inefficient, it should work fine.

I did not realize you already had some kind of solar system in place. I thought you just wanted to put a solar panel on the tractor. If you find that you existing system is not providing enough power to charge the battery, consider a single panel for the tractor with it's own MPPT charger.
 
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