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01-09-2025, 11:21 AM
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#1
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New Member
Join Date: Oct 2023
Location: Louisville, KY
Posts: 4
Year: 2001
Coachwork: Amtran
Chassis: International
Engine: DT466
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Noise Kill Circuit Confusion
Hey guys, I need help. I have searched and searched in an effort to figure this out on my own buy my last resort is to ask for help so here's my first post.
I have a 2001 International/Amtran bus. We use it for tailgating and staying warm between hockey games for our kids. Recently, the entire noise kill circuit started blowing a fuse killing all of the fans which completely defeats the purpose of the bus.
I have replaced the solenoid/contactor that controls the noise kill circuit. I have identified almost all of the fuses in the fuse block and matched them back to the diagram on the inside of the door. The fuse that keeps blowing is a 10 amp fuse that I can only identify as "Spare" on the diagram. The fuse blows when the noise kill circuit is on and when it's off. To this point, it only blows when the bus is in motion which leads me to believe there is a wiring bouncing around somewhere grounding out, blowing the fuse.
I have recently replaced the flashing lights with LED's and thought maybe one of the wires I unplugged was shorting out. I have since taped off every loose wire and removed the controller that handled the flashing lights.
I traced the little gray wire from the contactor and it goes straight to the switch at the helm, doesn't go through the fuse block to the "spare" fuse or anything.
I'm at a loss here. What could I have changed on that circuit that is blowing an obviously not "spare" fuse.
Please let me know if anyone else has experienced this and what you found to be the issue. If you need pics or further info, please let me know how I can help you, help me!
Thanks all,
Jeff
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01-09-2025, 01:06 PM
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#2
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Bus Nut
Join Date: Jun 2021
Location: Minnesota
Posts: 268
Year: 2003
Coachwork: Bluebird
Chassis: International 3800
Engine: DT466e 215hp Allison 2500
Rated Cap: 77
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A bad fan motor?
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01-09-2025, 01:12 PM
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#3
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Bus Crazy
Join Date: May 2015
Location: Central Tx.
Posts: 2,473
Year: 1999
Chassis: Amtran / International
Engine: DT466E HT 250HP - Md3060
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What generally "pops/blows" a fuse is either a dead "+" short to ground or overheating of a wire/circuit.
If the fuse pops "immediately" it is a short to ground.
If it blows/pops slowly then it probably a failing component or wires maybe melting/fusing together...
Post #8 in THIS THREAD, you'll find wiring diagrams that might help....
More diagrams in THIS THREAD too...
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01-09-2025, 03:18 PM
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#4
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New Member
Join Date: Oct 2023
Location: Louisville, KY
Posts: 4
Year: 2001
Coachwork: Amtran
Chassis: International
Engine: DT466
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Timeline
A bad fan motor?
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All fans have their own fuses. I'd guess if it was a bad fan motor, it would blow its individual fuse.
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01-09-2025, 03:20 PM
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#5
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New Member
Join Date: Oct 2023
Location: Louisville, KY
Posts: 4
Year: 2001
Coachwork: Amtran
Chassis: International
Engine: DT466
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ewo1
What generally "pops/blows" a fuse is either a dead "+" short to ground or overheating of a wire/circuit.
If the fuse pops "immediately" it is a short to ground.
If it blows/pops slowly then it probably a failing component or wires maybe melting/fusing together...
Post #8 in THIS THREAD, you'll find wiring diagrams that might help....
More diagrams in THIS THREAD too...
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These are great! I actually found these a year or so ago when I was researching which bus to buy. I couldn't remember what bus type they were for or find them again. I'll start researching now, thanks!
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01-09-2025, 08:43 PM
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#6
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Bus Crazy
Join Date: May 2015
Location: Central Tx.
Posts: 2,473
Year: 1999
Chassis: Amtran / International
Engine: DT466E HT 250HP - Md3060
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Hey, I took a look at all the diagrams I uploaded in those two posts and could not find a "Noise" circuit.
I did some deeper digging and found this diagram.
It covers IC busses manufactured after March 01, 2000.
It comes from the service manual S08286.
Here is a link to the complete diagram. You want to look at page 42.
http://bodybuilder.navistar.com/Gene...df/S08286a.pdf
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01-10-2025, 09:10 AM
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#7
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New Member
Join Date: Oct 2023
Location: Louisville, KY
Posts: 4
Year: 2001
Coachwork: Amtran
Chassis: International
Engine: DT466
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ewo1
Hey, I took a look at all the diagrams I uploaded in those two posts and could not find a "Noise" circuit.
I did some deeper digging and found this diagram.
It covers IC busses manufactured after March 01, 2000.
It comes from the service manual S08286.
Here is a link to the complete diagram. You want to look at page 42.
http://bodybuilder.navistar.com/Gene...df/S08286a.pdf
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Ahhh....here we go. I was looking through the first set of links last night, and, while similar, none of the fuse blocks were the same. This is the same as what I'm working with. I'll get out to the barn this weekend with my laptop and do some more wire chasing.
Thank you so much for the information and your time spent digging it up. I greatly appreciate it.
I remember now, I came across the bulk of your links when I was researching transmissions. I too have the 3060 and I was able to get 6th gear unlocked. All thanks to the fine folks on this forum.
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01-10-2025, 09:17 AM
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#8
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Bus Crazy
Join Date: Jun 2023
Location: South Carolina
Posts: 1,873
Year: 1995
Coachwork: Thomas
Chassis: International 3800
Engine: T444E
Rated Cap: 29
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Another thing to maybe consider is that some item on the line is faulty and drawing too much wattage. I experienced a similar issue when a Chinese company sent me 120V LEDs vs 12v LEDs. I wires in the 120V thinking they were 12V and fuse would pop instantly. As a test I would try a 20 amp fuse and see if it holds. If it does hold you could just be slightly over volted even if mathematically in your head it doesn't make sense.
Be sure you can watch the line though because in the 20amp range the wiring if too thin could melt and burn instead of the fuse.
If it still pops at 20 amps then something is definitely still shorting somewhere.
You may want to physically trace the line from front to back and for every item it connects to, add up the amps required for those devices. If a single light is 12v 2amp, that's 24 watts, if two lights it is 12v 4 amps because 2amp +2amp =4amps for two lights on the line. Add up the amps total for all devices on that line and then make sure it's under the fuse size you use. You also have to take into account the wire gauge size as they are rated to only handle a certain amount of amps, and if your fuse is bigger than your wires, the popping will occur on the wires themselves rather than the fuse. Wires pop at their weakest link. Think like a frayed rope, it's weaker where it is frayed. Wires and amps are the same and the fuse by design is a controlled frayed spot meant to be weaker than the wires, this is why we don't put higher sized fuses when lower ones pop usually.
Whenever you run into an electrical issue of this nature, go and physically inspect all devices and add up the total amperage from each device and do the math. If you are under spec then it is definitely a short somewhere then.
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