Report this forum post

Both of those fuses are for the control circuit, they prevent over amperage for the display and key systems. From what you mentioned above, I am not suprised that they blew. Replacing them will solve your issue. Anytime you are doing work on a lift, disconnect the battery and drain the module capacitors. Otherwise you are going to want to stock alot of fuses and make sure you have good medical inssurance and 911 on speed dial.
  • Posted 19 Jul 2024 22:17
  • By DyslexicNerd_01
  • joined 13 Jun'23 - 220 messages
  • Wisconsin, United States

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

Indicates mandatory field
Upcoming industry events …
October 29-31, 2025 - Marina Bay Sands, Singapore
November 26-27, 2025 - Budapest, Hungary
April 8-10, 2026 - Jiangsu Province, China
Global Industry News
edition #1243 - 14 August 2025
In this week’s Forkliftaction News , we look at more financial reports with one major producer recording a “significant” decline in Q2 bookings to report an operating loss of USD8.5 million, while another had a strong quarter “despite increased trade tensions and a challenging geopolitical landscape”... Continue reading
Fact of the week
The black box flight recorder was invented by Australian scientist David Warren in the mid-1950s. While initially met with indifference in Australia, his invention gained international recognition, particularly in the UK, and is now a mandatory piece of safety equipment on all commercial aircraft.
Global Industry News
edition #1243 - 14 August 2025
In this week’s Forkliftaction News , we look at more financial reports with one major producer recording a “significant” decline in Q2 bookings to report an operating loss of USD8.5 million, while another had a strong quarter “despite increased trade tensions and a challenging geopolitical landscape”... Continue reading
Fact of the week
The black box flight recorder was invented by Australian scientist David Warren in the mid-1950s. While initially met with indifference in Australia, his invention gained international recognition, particularly in the UK, and is now a mandatory piece of safety equipment on all commercial aircraft.