Greetings.. I bought Key West 1720cc in 06 but I think the motor is a 05 F90TLRD..On the right side there is a sticker with "mfg 05/04" on it so I'm not 100% sure.. My boat was put up for a few months with the motor up on that flip down lever.. I hooked up the battery and the trim motor wouldn't go down..I let it down with the release screw and when it was down the switch worked again so I ran it all the way up and back down and there it stays..Dead again and relay clicking.. I did some research and found that on the relay the blue is the up wire and the green is down. I disconnected both and put the blue wire right on the verified hot/red nut and still it didn't go up so I presume the motor is bad or likely the brushes are stuck.. The other problem is I tested the relay outputs while pushing the button and I get battery voltage out the bottom/green wire screw but nothing out the top/blue wire "up"screw.. I can only think the relay is bad as well as the motor.. Is there more I should know here? Am I doing the right tests the right way? Thanks
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So your battery is good? You could take leads off relay assembly and put one on positive battery terminal and one on negative. See if motor runs. Then reverse leads, should run in opposite direction. may be easiest to move battery close to engine to reach terminals. Then perhaps you can say relay is hosed.
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Originally posted by pstephens46 View PostSo your battery is good? You could take leads off relay assembly and put one on positive battery terminal and one on negative. See if motor runs. Then reverse leads, should run in opposite direction. may be easiest to move battery close to engine to reach terminals. Then perhaps you can say relay is hosed.Key West 1720cc
Yamaha F90TLRD mfg.05/04
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Plus 1 ^^^.
Direct wire the battery to the T&T (AND disconnect the T&T from the engine harness completely). Swap wires for up, and then down. Rule the T&T motor good or bad...
A voltmeter to the relay (both before and after) when activated should let you know what's going on.
Also, sometimes, if the brushes are sticking, gently tapping the motor will often loosen them..
**I'd be checking battery terminals, grounds, etc as their most likely to be an issue before digging into anything else...Scott
1997 Angler 204, Center Console powered by a 2006 Yamaha F150TXR
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if the motor will run up it will run down
testing the relay is dirt simple.
use a digital meter.
attach one lead to the green terminal, the other to blue.
hit the up switch.
you should read about battery voltage of one polarity or the other.
now hit the switch down, should see the same voltage with opposite polarity.
yep it is that simple.
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the relay has to make good connections on both the pos and neg and reverse the polarity also when the othe direction switch is used.
the contacts in the relay can sometimes not make good contact .
As Rodbolt said test to see what is going on
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Originally posted by rodbolt17 View Postat rest both contactors are at ground.
the up or down coil that gets energized by the control circuit moves that contactor to a positive potential.Key West 1720cc
Yamaha F90TLRD mfg.05/04
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Originally posted by rodbolt17 View Postif the motor will run up it will run down
testing the relay is dirt simple.
use a digital meter.
attach one lead to the green terminal, the other to blue.
hit the up switch.
you should read about battery voltage of one polarity or the other.
now hit the switch down, should see the same voltage with opposite polarity.
yep it is that simple.Jason
1998 S115TLRW + 1976 Aquasport 170
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Originally posted by Jason2tpa View PostDam, I wish troubleshooting the oil pumps electrical system had been as easy as this T/T.
Yeah, everything is "that simple" when broken down to simple circuits. Afterall all electrical faults are either current flows when it should not or it does not flow when it should.
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when troubleshooting simple DC circuits it is easy.
if it is shorted find the ground path, usually by melted wires and/or blown fuses.
shorts rarely happen.
open circuits do happen and happen often.
open circuits are easy to test using a voltage drop between various points in the circuit.
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