When my #72 was my only Cub Cadet, about every 2-3 years the battery would start going dead, turned out the voltage regulator stopped working. Then I got this rode hard put away wet 129 with the voltage regulator mounted WAY back under the seat, way away from engine heat & vibration, and the el-cheapo Standard Auto Electrical equipment voltage regulator just worked and worked, like the Energizer Bunny, while the voltage regulator on the #72 up high on the grill, bathed in intense engine heat and vibration still DIES every 2-3 years. The Simple Tractor electrical system trouble-shooting page says the relays are stuck closed from too much vibration. So one Sunday I start installing my new CC voltage regulator, I pull off the rear frame cover back under the seat, a surprising amount of room back there, probably only 3-4 degrees hotter than ambient temps, very little vibration, and the stock unmodified OEM wire harness reaches all the way back to it, you just need to make sure none of the connections short out to any metal. AND today, over 30 years later that same voltage regulator is still working. We wired up the #70 the same way. Keep in mind my #72 has a BUNCH of lights on it, also an AM/FM/cassette deck radio but the tape deck doesn't work anymore. Same vibration that killed several of my voltage regularors also killed my light switch, one Veteran's Day about 20-25 years ago I lawn vacuumed from Noon till after Midnight, was unhooking the cart outside the shop and the lights flickered, then went out. The switch was under the back edge of the battery, this 30 year old switch was burned to a crisp, the clips the wires connected to the wires were just hanging, one still electrically "hot" just hanging there. Had to do a little re-wiring before I switched from lawn vacuuming to lawn aerating the next day! I put over 25 operating hours on that Cubbie that weekend, most of them Friday from Noon till well after Midnight and a bunch Saturday afternoon.