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I didn't notice the overload light bulb wire across the overload glass tube. That would light if the glass tube were shorted, unless of coursethere's no voltage at all getting to the tube or that overload lamp is burned out.
Think about it. During normal operation the glass tube thermal-breaker is a dead short (or close to it). The light bulb stays dark as there is no voltage across it. When a high-current overload occurs the thermal breaker heats up and eventually becomes an open circuit. But the high current load which caused the breaker to open is still present in the circuit. Compared to that load the bulb is fairly high resistance. Since the bulb is now in series with the low-resistance load, it sees most of the supply voltage across it and lit illuminates. It will stay lit until the overload is removed or until the thermal breaker resets. If the overload is still not removed the entire cycle will repeat.I've seen this type of circuit in other throttles.
Yes. That's how the overload on my own throttle used to work. I just didn't see the wiring in the photos of the Trollerto figure out that it works that way.