Discussion:
Dead cat Nrr40

We have a cat Nrr40 electric isle stacker that was running fine untill we slid the battery out to check water and charge.Slid the battery back in then plugged up i think the keyswitch was on at the time and now nothing. Ive checked all the fuses there ok.There no display on the panel any ideas?????????
  • Posted 19 Aug 2011 10:51
  • By chip_w
  • joined 19 Aug'11 - 2 messages
  • Mississippi, United States
Showing items 1 - 2 of 2 results.
Checked the truck today and no it doesnt have a gate switch at the battery.Talked to the guy today that done the charging and he admitted when he slid the battery back in he accidentally plugged the charger plug into the lift and turned the key on.He said the display on the dash came on momentary then went off. After that nothing no display on dash not anything.Any help on this thing will be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
  • Posted 20 Aug 2011 08:59
  • By chip_w
  • joined 19 Aug'11 - 2 messages
  • Mississippi, United States
since the problem started after you slid out the battery. are you POSITIVE you did not charge the truck instead of the battery?
Some of these units had an optional battery gate switch, that required the battery holding brackets at the sides to be properly installed, have you checked to see if that is your problem? does the dash give any clues or codes or messages?
  • Posted 19 Aug 2011 20:03
  • By edward_t
  • joined 5 Mar'08 - 2,334 messages
  • South Carolina, United States
"it's not rocket surgery"

Post your Reply

Forkliftaction accepts no responsibility for forum content and requires forum participants to adhere to our rules of conduct. Click here for more information.

If you are having trouble using the Discussion Forums, please contact us for help.

PREMIUM business

Lift Tek Elecar
Global leader in the design and manufacture of masts, carriages, integral sideshifters & fork positioners.
Upcoming in the editorial calendar
WIRELESS CHARGING
Aug 2025
MANAGING MIXED FLEETS
Oct 2025
Latest job alerts …
Wentzville, MO, United States
Columbia, SC, United States
Cleveland Ohio, United States
Forkliftaction turns 25 Brisbane, QLD, Australia
Fact of the week
The dot-com bubble, a period of large and rapid investments in internet-based companies, peaked in 2000 and saw the Nasdaq Composite index rise by 579%. Then the bubble imploded. As the value of tech stocks plummeted, cash-strapped internet start-ups became worthless and collapsed.