I bought one used for a good price to compensate for a few problems with my DF 140. On the best bolt position it's too low when I raise it up, so it's not fully out of the water. And one notch higher it does sometimes go to high in waves. But this unit comes without a wiring harness. I have looked at the harness, it seems like it's just reversing the polarity of the power sendt to the actuator. So a pair of two channel relays is used, one relay for up, sending power + to one cable and - to the other cable, and another relay for down that does the same, only with reversed polarity. I mailed T-H Marine about it, and they very quickly (about five minutes) answered that no, I needed the 7014G wiring assembly "for the unit to work properly". So is that actually needed to operate it, or is it just a way of saying "we want to sell you at least one new part when you've been so naughty and bought one of our jack plates used"?
In the troubleshooting section of the company's web page it says:
"If your jack plate only runs one way, but not the other, jump the power cord directly to 12V battery. Follow the black power cord coming out of the unit’s motor to the disconnect point. Disconnect the blue and green wires from the relay harness. Now the green and blue wires can be directly jumped to a 12V battery by touching the green wire to the positive post of the battery and the blue wire to the negative post of the battery at the same time. Reversing this connection will run the unit in the opposite direction."
To me that suggests that only the relays (and of course a fuse) are needed to get this to work. But of course it would be a bad thing to mess up something that even used is quite expensive...
In the troubleshooting section of the company's web page it says:
"If your jack plate only runs one way, but not the other, jump the power cord directly to 12V battery. Follow the black power cord coming out of the unit’s motor to the disconnect point. Disconnect the blue and green wires from the relay harness. Now the green and blue wires can be directly jumped to a 12V battery by touching the green wire to the positive post of the battery and the blue wire to the negative post of the battery at the same time. Reversing this connection will run the unit in the opposite direction."
To me that suggests that only the relays (and of course a fuse) are needed to get this to work. But of course it would be a bad thing to mess up something that even used is quite expensive...
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