- Thread starter
- #141
now I'm going to have to pull my starter to see what's going on.
I have an extra starter. I can check. What do you want checked?
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now I'm going to have to pull my starter to see what's going on.
What a F'n block head I am!
I can troubleshoot and repair machines that maintain accuracy measured in microns but a simple starter circuit and the brain turns to stone.
Now that I know what the "click" is I'm positive that the ignition switch will solve the problem and since I've had it as well I'll be ordering one for my truck.
Thanks to those guys who finally made a dent and helped me see what is going on.
Sorry for all the back and forth on this, it tends to drive people crazy when I just don't get things when I think I do.![]()
What made you see the light?
Damn Rick, now you got me thinking all my knuckle busting from today was in vain.
What a F'n block head I am!
I can troubleshoot and repair machines that maintain accuracy measured in microns but a simple starter circuit and the brain turns to stone.
Now that I know what the "click" is I'm positive that the ignition switch will solve the problem and since I've had it as well I'll be ordering one for my truck.
Why not just put in a relay and have a starter kill at the same time? Cheaper too.
Please keep us posted on your fix![]()
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However if the pinion and flex plate are aligned so the gears don't mesh, then the pinion and flex plate collide with a click and the weakened magnetic field cannot over come the resistance of the spring so the plunger never connects with the contacts and nothing happens.
In a healthy system, if the pinion were to collide with the flex plate the plunger would continue to compress the spring making the connection with the contacts and starting the motor, where the rotation would finish moving the pinion into place providing solid drive to start the engine.
At least this is what I think is happening, I have an order in for a switch.
Metro, my truck is 11 years old with over 200k on it, I think a new ignition switch is reasonable.
I'm doing an ignition switch in one of my favorite german cars this week, I'll post up a pic of the carnage since it operates the same as the 80 switch.
ST
The life of the ignition switch is reduced if you carry 5lbs of keys, flashlights, beer openers, and assorted tools on the keyring.
-B-
I believe a better comparison would be a bad window switch causing intermittent electrical operation, regarless of what's attached to it.
The life of the ignition switch is reduced if you carry 5lbs of keys, flashlights, beer openers, and assorted tools on the keyring.
-B-
On our trucks is this a single unit? I just assumed that the electrical part was separate from the key part. And what I ordered from Dan was just the "switch" and not the tumbler assembly.
not the same at all.