Report this forum post

Thank you BREWSKI. We checked that out and the ballast is good. We actually disconnected the 12v from the start position on the switch so it has to start by getting voltage through the ballast and it does the same thing.. thank you for the reply
  • Posted 2 Jun 2018 03:50
  • By 1932
  • joined 1 Jun'18 - 2 messages
  • California, United States
Love to learn

This is ONLY to be used to report flooding, spam, advertising and problematic (harassing, abusive or crude) posts.

Indicates mandatory field

PREMIUM business

BSL New Energy Technology Co., Ltd
BSLBATT - practical expertise and excellent design in the industrial lithium-ion battery market.
Global Industry News
edition #1245 - 28 August 2025
In this week’s Forkliftaction News , we look at MHEDA’s Q3 Economic Advisory Report which reveals current resilience in the US materials handling sector... Continue reading
Fact of the week
The word "okay" (or its abbreviation "OK") originated as a humorous misspelling. In the 1830s, a fad in Boston involved using abbreviations of intentionally misspelled phrases. "OK" stood for "oll korrect," a playful mispronunciation of "all correct".
Global Industry News
edition #1245 - 28 August 2025
In this week’s Forkliftaction News , we look at MHEDA’s Q3 Economic Advisory Report which reveals current resilience in the US materials handling sector... Continue reading

PREMIUM business

BSL New Energy Technology Co., Ltd
BSLBATT - practical expertise and excellent design in the industrial lithium-ion battery market.
Aichi RX07B
Yokohama, Japan
Used - Sale
Toyota 8FBE20U
Flesherton, Ontario, Canada
Used - Sale
Global Industry News
edition #1245 - 28 August 2025
In this week’s Forkliftaction News , we look at MHEDA’s Q3 Economic Advisory Report which reveals current resilience in the US materials handling sector... Continue reading
Fact of the week
The word "okay" (or its abbreviation "OK") originated as a humorous misspelling. In the 1830s, a fad in Boston involved using abbreviations of intentionally misspelled phrases. "OK" stood for "oll korrect," a playful mispronunciation of "all correct".