replacing rubber insulator on 9N cutout.

manya77

Member
I started a new thread on this. I used three plastic caps from
cap nails. Stacked they are about the same thickness as the original rubber washer. Comments ?
 
That should work. All you need is something to prevent contact between the electrical conductors (the wire and the metal terminal) and the case of the cutout.
 
(quoted from post at 14:17:37 06/17/15) That should work. All you need is something to prevent contact between the electrical conductors (the wire and the metal terminal) and the case of the cutout.
i, Jim. I thought I knew this cut out like the back of my hand, but I can't figure out the insulation 'hub'/washer that is being discussed. Any light?
 
I called it a hub because I did not know what is was when it fell apart. It learned it is a rubber insulator on the terminal posts (external).
 
His cutout is not like the new ones. The connections are screw terminals that just stick out of the body a short distance. I've never seen one like this before, so I suspect it might be OEM. (Either that or somebody used to make an aftermarket cutout that was different from what is now available.)
 
(quoted from post at 18:59:50 06/17/15) His cutout is not like the new ones. The connections are screw terminals that just stick out of the body a short distance. I've never seen one like this before, so I suspect it might be OEM. (Either that or somebody used to make an aftermarket cutout that was different from what is now available.)
ery interesting! Thanks.
 
Please explain the configuration of the screw terminals on the new cut out. What is the purpose of the U on the left terminal on JMOR's photo ? Which wire goes to which ?

Her.
 
(quoted from post at 21:00:01 06/17/15) Please explain the configuration of the screw terminals on the new cut out. What is the purpose of the U on the left terminal on JMOR's photo ? Which wire goes to which ?

Her.
terminal to/from generator. Some applications had the cut out mounted on the generator & the U slipped onto the generator terminal (Model A, I believe). Not a rear terminal gen as on N tractors.
 
(quoted from post at 07:30:24 06/19/15) This is the voltage regulator?

Nope. This is the cutout. The 9N and 2N don't have regulators (at least, not if they are stock). The output of the generator is adjusted by you turning the brush adjuster on the backside of the generator. All the cutout does is cuts the connection between the generator and the battery when the generator is not generating (normally when the engine is stopped).
 

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