Doosan (& Daewoo) G25S:
no movement

The fuse for the transmission blows. It lasts a day or so, then blows.
I've traced the wiring as much as possible, and can find no reason for
it to blow. If someone has had this issue I would appreciate any advice. Is there anyway to check the solenoid valves that shift the lift from forward to reverse ? Any ideas or solutions would be greatly
appreciated. Thanks, Robert
  • Posted 26 Mar 2014 04:56
  • Discussion started by Catsfan9
  • South Carolina, United States
Showing items 1 - 1 of 1 results.
Catsfan, If you are blowing a fuse you will have a short somewhere. These lifts have a very basic wiring harness for the transmission. Fused voltage to the directional control lever which sends voltage to the forward and reverse solenoids on the transmission valve body. I have not ever seen an internal short inside one of these solenoids. Im not saying it couldn't happen, but usually they either work or they don't as they are just coil wound solenoids. If I were you I would ohm out the wiring between the direction control lever and solenoids and do a wire wiggle test and see if you have resistance fluctuation. Also check the wiring where the steering column tilts and where it goes down behind the floor plate. These are the only two areas I can think of that may damage the wiring. Hope this helps.
  • Posted 26 Mar 2014 11:01
  • Reply by LTS1
  • Florida, United States

Post your Reply

Forkliftaction.com accepts no responsibility for forum content and requires forum participants to adhere to the rules. Click here for more information.

Having trouble using the Discussion Forums? Contact us for help.

Latest job alerts …
Ottumwa, IA, United States
Harrisburg, SD, United States
Wentzville, MO, United States
Fact of the week
Bluetooth is named after the 10th-century Viking king, Harald Bluetooth, who united warring tribes in Denmark and Norway. In 1997, Jim Kardach from Intel gave the name to the technology because of its ability to unite different communication protocols, just as Harald united various tribes.
Global Industry News
edition #1235 - 19 June 2025
Greek philosopher Heraclitus is credited with the famous saying “change is the only constant”, and this week’s Forkliftaction News demonstrates this is certainly true in the case of the materials handling sector... Continue reading
Fact of the week
Bluetooth is named after the 10th-century Viking king, Harald Bluetooth, who united warring tribes in Denmark and Norway. In 1997, Jim Kardach from Intel gave the name to the technology because of its ability to unite different communication protocols, just as Harald united various tribes.