bobbie-g Thanks for the get-back. Before I got back here to see your answer I must have called 10 equipment dealers and 1 Bobcat dealer to get the scoop on this goofy setup! I actually ran a cross a Bobcat dealer in Wisconsin who would tell me anything about this deal! I thought that my buddy messed up the sensor and was preparing to drive the 110 mile round trip to get one at our dealer, but made a fly-by to my his place, where the loader is, and we plugged the switch back in and did as Tazza told me to do - except for as YOU said - moving it in and out. And BINGO - the light came on and we were in business! After we got it working we used a hose clamp and put it around the sensor, which clamped the magnet in place, the stuffed it in back of the seat on top of that shelf. Unfortunately none of Bobcat's designers were here with us, or I would have shoved it someplace else!!!! I must be a glutton for punishment for even thinking about buying another Bobcat to resell ! After building 4 rat rods - three of them from the ground-up - I can't help but wonder how anyone can conjure up so many ways to screw up the design of something so simple as a skid loader. Let's see...............we need ONE hydraulic pump, a manifold for it to distribute the fluid to the 1. lift, 2. tilt, 3. right turn, and 4. left turn functions. Then we need a few 12 volt electrical circuits: 1. Ignition/start switch; 2. fuel shut-off solenoid, 3. headlights/tail lights; 4. a momentary switch for the glow plugs and, oh yeah, - 5. ONE interlock switch that goes on the lap bar, so that when you raise the lap bar it shuts off power to the fuel shutoff solenoid - thereby killing the engine!!!! That would be what - 4 solenoids, a couple switches, and couple miles of wire (!!) that Bobcat could save their money on the next time their (god I HATE this word!) "engineers" designs one of these over-engineered cluster f#@%s? It might also be prudent (not to mention the big "plus" in customer service ratings) if they'd stop that bastardizing the specs on things like axle bearings and seals, so we could buy them from an auto parts store, or industrial supply company, or off Ebay. At $45,000-$80,000 for a new Bobcat, one would think that they already made enough money off of us when we buy a new one! Not to mention all the headaches they'd save US, when we refuse to pay someone a doctor's wages to work on it!!! Just a guess here - but I'd say that if Bobcat would make their "engineers" go into the field and actually WORK on one of these things for a couple years, maybe they'd think twice about doing 1/2 the goofy stuff they do to them? I wonder wow the CEO of Bobcat would like it when he heard that his neurosurgeon just received his medical degree!!!!!!!! Building machines with parts that we can only buy from the manufacturer does NOT make their machines user-friendly, it only serves to encourage the end-user to look at another manufacturer's equipment. I feel like that dude in the Verizon commercial!!! HEY BOBCAT - CAN YA' HEAR US NOW?????? Big thanks to you, Tazza and all the others who helped me get this thing under control again.