Andrew_Trayfoot
Well-Known Member
I moved that very same fuse to a more accessible position.
It's about the only things about the Beta 20 I would criticise.
It's about the only things about the Beta 20 I would criticise.
i presume you are speaking about the uk crew?Generally I think the are actually a pretty good company.
At the beginning of this season I melted my starter motor due to a stuck key switch. They were really helpful working with a slightly fraught me diagnosing what was going on. I was back up and running in 3 days...
Look, engineers just work like that. They design something until it works, and then don't touch it again. Doesn't matter if the servicing is difficult as long as their design works.ive left it where it is for now, just replaced the fuse so i can get going again, but its deffo a job for the future.
i agree with your sentiments thats its the only thing you can criticise, i sorta feel the same, its proven to be a very reliable engine so far.
oh, besides the cost of the front coolant tube, which blew off at selsey point, leaving me to wait in Portsmouth for the replacement to arrive, £50!!!
its 8 inches long!
but the location of that fuse completely destroys my outlook towards beta.
it would be SUCH an easy task to do before engines are shipped out!
i sent them an email, the long and the short of it was i came up with 4 likely scenarios...
1,they are just plain lazy
2. they are too stupid to realise the the lack of space around the engine in an average small boat
3, they are just skinflints, preferring not to make such a small modification in favour of profits.
4, they are just money grubbing corporate B****** looking to make an extra buck on the callouts from the clueless masses that end up in the same predicament.
im eagerly awaiting a reply, but i doubt i will get one.
Oh, I used to have a yanmar engine. Bloody prices on that. Beta is quite affordable, and if it's too expensive, you can always look for kubota tractor parts. Usually the same thing but a lot cheaperBeta Marine is a UK company based in Gloucester as far as I'm aware.
Beta Marine | Diesel Marine Propulsion Engines, Generating Sets & Inboard Electric Propulsion Motors
They maranise Japanese Kabuta industrial engines..
Not aware that they are American, although I see they have an American presence.
In terms of spare parts prices. They are no worse than any other main dealer, but they do hold stock.
One of the first things I checked. The switch is inside and in a very dry location, connections were in mint condition.Have you looked at the connections on the 1-2- both switch? When I was having trouble starting my Perkins the symptoms were flat batteries although they were fully charged. I cleaned up every connection all to no avail. When someone on this forum suggested cleaning the switch, on opening it up I found all connections inside were corroded away
A new switch cured the problem.
Today it's time for a classic; Finding Private Fuse.my fuse was directly underneath the air filter intake box and the bell housing, i had to take the filter housing off and still couldnt see it with the phone camera waved around. maybe you can see the wire harness passing between them? if you can trace around there with your hand with the filter box removed, the fuse is in a little box-like object attached to the wires. if not there, then the book says its somewhere above the starter motor, i wasnt that lucky.
the not clicking part you mentioned sounds like a solenoid issue, the small wire is a low voltage signal to allow the solenoid to deliver the high amp supply to the starter, if you short the top stud and the starter body and nothing happens then its the solenoid, thats where the clicking sound happens, the solenoid also pushes the starter cog forward to engage in the flywheel teeth.
my advice is double your efforts to locate the fuse first, once thats sorted move onto the next before rewiring everything.
oh there was much of that, plus lots of fuming and steaming and stomping around, took me a good twwo hours to get the damn thing changed once id located it.Today it's time for a classic; Finding Private Fuse.
It's not for chiildren for all the blood (from knuckles probably) and coarse language.
ive thought about this for a week or two since my issue, and this is how i intend to deal with the issue one i get to my home port.Okay, got the new parts, but bit stumped on how I would go on cleaning the fuse holder now. I'd replace it, if I could reach the cable well enough to work on it, but I honestly can't.
And then that's maybe not even the solution, with my luck. *sigh* boat jobs...
Yes, moving the fuse is definitely useful for the future, but I only lack the access to move anything around, it's so inaccessible, that I can't even grab it with both hands at the same time, how am I going to do any cabling there?ive thought about this for a week or two since my issue, and this is how i intend to deal with the issue one i get to my home port.
im going to get two spade connectors wired up on a length, attach another fuse block to the other end. arrange the spades in the same configuration as the blade fuse, fix them in place with some polymorph thermoplastic, then just simply plug them into the existing connector, then place the new fuse holder in a much much more convenient location.
i may then use some more polymorph plastic around the spades and old fuse holder just to securely join them permanently.
its the best solution i can think of given that i absolutely do not have access to be soldering anything, and i dont want to have the same struggle again the next time.
i cant even get both hands around it where it is now to do anything with it, it was all done by deft manipulation with one hand and my ear squashed up against the bulkhead
fixing the fuse may not be the end of your problem, but its the cheapest and most likely of culprits, so wont cost you an arm for doing it, and it absolutely needed doing anyway.
if it DOES fix your issue, you can have a few pints with the money you woulda spent on a new starter![]()