Re: Remote oil transfer on 1990 yamaha 200etxd
Re: Remote oil transfer on 1990 yamaha 200etxd
when you did the voltage test at the pump brown wire did you go from the block to the brown lead AND toggle the manual switch with the key on?
you should see a volt or so drop but never below 11V.
another method is between the battery positive and the pump brown wire,toggle it and voltage should read less than .5 volts.
this method can be used on any 12v circuit, what your testing is the ability of the wire to carry a load.
when you tested the brown wire did you toggle the manual switch? with 12V on the brown and 6 on the blue either the pump is dropping 6 volts or the supply connection is failing.
usually its the splice in the 10 pin harness just aft of the engine side connector, its where they tapped into the key on yellow ign wire with the brown lead heading to the pump or its the tank harness connector at either the tank or the engine.
this is where knowing what your meter is trying to tell you.
voltage is simply a measure of electricl pressure.
think of it as a garden hose, you have 12 PSI behind the nozzle but the supply valve is almost off, with the nozzle closed you have your 12 PSI but no water(current) flow, open the nozzle ( electrical load) and PSI will fall to zero,close the nozzle and it pops back up to 12 psi.
the mostly closed supply valve is acting like a coroded connection as it still has 12 psi on its supply side.
we will call the engine side of the engine end of the tank harness A, the tank side of the tank end we will call B.
if you back probe the engine side and the tank side we are now going to tyest the ability of A to B to flow current.
with no load you should read 0 V, when loaded you should read less than .03 Volts.
the electrical potential between point A and B if all connections are good should be roughly the same under a load, if not you have a wire or connection failure.
same will work between the positive power take off and the pump brown wire with the circuit loaded( blue wire from the pump grounded) if you read over .5 volts find the supply side failure, once you eliminate the supply to the pump simply move the leads to the pump ble to ground and load it. no more than .03 V is allowable on the ground circuit.
its a very very simple system, quit beating yourself
