Report this forum post

Does anyone know of anything else to try? I'm trying to check all the wiring to make sure it is correct, I can compare some things to the old parts lift because it is the exact same but some parts have been robbed from it leaving the wires hanging. I'm confident the contactor board is correct. I'm pretty sure TB601 is correct but unsure about TB602 wiring. Of course if I had the right diagram it would help. I think for the most part it is correct because I've been careful when replacing parts and swapping wires over. If anyone has any other ideas I would be glad to try them. Thanks guys.
  • Posted 26 Jun 2019 04:28
  • By jackson_p
  • joined 18 Jun'19 - 66 messages
  • Tennessee, United States

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

Indicates mandatory field
Global Industry News
edition #1252 - 16 October 2025
In this week’s Forkliftaction News , we report on the GEP Global Supply Chain Volatility Index which shows Asian supply chains are at their busiest since June 2022 while the US and Europe’s supply chains remain under-utilised. One of the report authors describes the situation as being “as stable as it’s going to get”... Continue reading
Fact of the week
Brussels Airport in Belgium, Europe is the world's largest sales point for chocolate, with over 800 tonnes of chocolate sold annually. This averages out to about 1.5 kilograms sold every minute.
Upcoming industry events …
November 11, 2025 - Sydney, Australia
November 26-27, 2025 - Budapest, Hungary
May 20-22, 2026 - Jakarta, Indonesia
Editorial calendar - planned features
CONSTRUCTION FORKLIFTS
HANDLING GOODS IN THE COLD
LOADING/UNLOADING FREIGHT
BROWNFIELD AUTOMATION
FORKLIFT ATTACHMENTS
BATTERY AFFORDABILITY AND LIFETIME
FORKLIFT SAFETY
Tusk 500PGH16
Coraopolis, Pennsylvania, United States
Used - Sale & Hire
Toyota 3FD100
Yokohama, Japan
Used - Sale

PREMIUM business

Noblelift
Global leader and manufacturer of high quality electric, lithium-ion, and IC material handling equipment.
Fact of the week
Brussels Airport in Belgium, Europe is the world's largest sales point for chocolate, with over 800 tonnes of chocolate sold annually. This averages out to about 1.5 kilograms sold every minute.