On May 20, 7:16 pm, J <
jcl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Helo gurus,
>
> For the winter I have generally just disconnect the battery on my lawn tractor and leave the tractor in the garage.
Leaving a battery like that will usually shorten it's life.
Batteries will slowly self-dscharge and having it sit around
partially or fully discharged leads to sulfation and failure.
You can buy a battery tender that you can put on it to
keep it fully charged during the winter.
In the spring I usually have to jump the lawn tractor anyway to get
it started - not necessarily because the battery is dead, but because
starting it the first time in the spring is a bear and usually takes a
lot of cranking (and the tractor battery runs down before I can get
the tractor started). However, once I've started it and got her
running for a while, I can start it from the battery without too much
trouble for the rest of the season.
>
> This spring, I jumped it and it started right up. I let it run for a while, but then when I went to turn on the blades, it sputtered and died. I had to jump it again, but this time started the blades with it still connected to the car battery - no problem. After disconnecting, I tried starting and stopping the blades a few times with no trouble, but then after sitting a couple of minutes, again the engine died when I tried to start the blades.
>
> Finally, I jumped it, started the blades and then mowed for about an hour - figuring this would both charge the battery and loosen up any tightness in the blades. Afterwards, same problem - and I also couldn't start the engine from off.
>
> I'm thinking "new battery time". I just measured the voltage (tractor off) and got 12.2.
That is a reasonable value. But then measuring voltage
on an unloaded battery doesn't tell you the whole story.
That's why pros use a battery tester that puts a load on it.
It's a 12 volt battery, but I'm not sure if that's a decent voltage
or not - that was after a few unsuccessful cranks by the way. I swear
I've never had a problem starting the blades once I got the tractor is
running, so I'm wondering if the problem is something else (or if
there are multiple problems). Like maybe the blades are sticking and
things need to be greased and the extra oomph required to start the
blades is too much for the battery - just like it can kill your engine
if you go too quickly through grass that's too high. Or maybe the
battery's not charging properly while the tractor's running. Is there
a good way to diagnose the problem or should I just get a new battery
and worry about it later if that doesn't solve things?
>
> The only reason I'm asking now instead of just figuring it's the battery is that it seems to me that in the past when the battery had died, once I jump-started the mower, I had no problems turning the blades on/off - it was only starting the tractor that was a problem.
>
> Thanks.
Once the tractor starts, it should be supplying it's own
power to keep it running. Might be an interlock switch
or sensor that's bad that gets involved when you move
the handle to engage the blades.