mitch504
Senior Member
GOOD GOSH,NO, JOHN! You can't mention cigarettes! That'll really arouse the government leviathan!
:beatsme
:drinkup
:beatsme
At a show last year I'm staring into the cab of a new Cat or Deere loader [can't remember which] I said to the sales guy " what would I do if this wouldn't start some morning?" He said "call us, we'll plug the laptop in & figure it out" Sad that an average mechanic can't fix much anymore.
At a show last year I'm staring into the cab of a new Cat or Deere loader [can't remember which] I said to the sales guy " what would I do if this wouldn't start some morning?" He said "call us, we'll plug the laptop in & figure it out" Sad that an average mechanic can't fix much anymore.
I am enough of a luddite that it pisses me off when the problem is some electronic gadget that's on there just to make the machine do what the model before did without it.
I think I posted this somewhere on this site but seems to fit the subject here.
We have a 988H Cat for our main pit loader in the quarry. As will happen at times in digging shot rock a large rock fell off the bucket and hit the boom. Just hard enough to snap the 10mm bolts holding the tilt sensor and guard. Did no damage to the linkage or sensor. Figured that's an easy fix. Removed a couple broken bolts and straightened a slight bend in the guard. Once it was back together tried to use machine, nothing on the boom or tilt system would work. At that time we did not have access to Cat ET program. Called dealer and tech comes out and runs calibration on sensor and everything was working in about five minutes. Seems when the sensor was hit it rotated out of the "normal" range and the ECM went into panic mode and shut everything down. Why could not the ECM just forget what happened when key was turned off an go back to what was calibrated in when sensor was installed?
Another of my pet-peeves is the "Trouble Codes" why can't the digital display just say "Number six injector coil amps too high" instead of some random looking numbers that you have to spend half an hour digging to find what they mean?
Sometimes engineers do things because they can, not because it's the sensible thing to do.
Back in the late 90's I got a call from a parts guy at another CAT dealer, his customer was a logger with a CAT excavator converted to a log loader. Membrane switch panel wore out, couldn't turn the window wipers on anymore. Wanted to replace the switch pad, right? Not sure why but somebody told him to call me when he couldn't figure it out and CAT was no help. Anyway, when you pushed the little bump on the switch panel, the module it was connected to sent a signal over a four wire harness back to the system computer, which probably had a meeting with the engine computer, to decide if they should allow you to have wipers or not. The computer sent the signal back to a relay next to the operator's right foot in the side panel there, about 18 inches below the switch, to turn on power to the wiper motor. Problem was, you can't buy the switch pad, you have to buy the display module it was part of... at the time over $700. Wow. I told them I would deny it if ever questioned buy my suggestion was to remove the relay and wire in a toggle switch between the power lead and the wiper motor wire.
Sometimes engineers do things because they can, not because it's the sensible thing to do.
lantrax how is it we are all talking about the same thing and all pretty much feel the same way about how things are turning seems like for the worse but its still happening!!!!! just like that dc 70 that I cant find a sprocket for why were they aloud to do that!!!!!!!! how can you build a machine advertise how great it is than just quit
RIPN
I'll just stick with my old Trojan, life is simple with it.................