As I previously wrote, after an electrical burnout involving improperly grounding new headlights, my dexta (63) would not start. At that fateful event, the tractor started just fine, sounded normal and only after a minute I noticed the red wire leading from the regulator to the front lights burning, so I then turned off the tractor. After the fire I found that all other electrical functions are fine. I followed advice here and discovered that electricity can activate the solenoid (clicking sound included) and result in electricity in the main cable to the start motor, but no action at all results from this (no sound what so ever). I tested this with a 12v indicator, but have no idea if the amps are ok. The battery is new as of a few weeks ago, bought and mounted after the fire.
Is it common for a electrical fire involving lights to burn out a start motor? Is there a chance that the start motor is fine, but the amps are too low, perhaps due to a faulty solenoid/wires?
Is it common for a broken start motor to be absolutely silent (no reaction) when electrified? I had expected at least a clunking sound...
The dexta manual says to make sure the start motor has 'good earth'. I dont have any earth cable coming out of the device and attached to the frame, which I think is logical since it itself is attached to the frame. Should there be one? Is there an electrical component in the start motor that is sensitive to a short circuit event occuring at the front of the tractor?
