Postby FI Spyder » 15 Aug 2020 13:37
I did have starter problems. Being new to the car and connections clean and seeming good, I replaced the starter with a gear reduction starter. That didn't solve the problem. I found that spraying the solenoid connection (by fuse block) fixed the problem (for a while), then it would fail in an increasing frequency. At one point I took the solenoid (by fuse block) apart and the contacts in the 35 year old, 100,000 mile (at that point) solenoid looked brand new, put it back together. Then I found that the 12V distribution clamp by the battery was loose and when I wiggled it the car would start. Problem kept getting worse. I thought I would remove the cable going from the battery to starter so the distribution clamp could be put in a vise and tightened. On doing that the battery clamp fell off the wire (itself being clamped to the wire). The lead clamp had expended so that even though the clamp was tight, it still couldn't make good contact with the wire. I folded half the strands back on itself (to make the wire thicker) and cut the others off and now the clamp could grip the wire tight. No problem starting after that after years of tracing down what seemed to be a moving cause of no start. The moral of the story is assume nothing and any connection in the starting circuit can cause a problem from solid to intermittent. And oh, it still is using that original starter solenoid (now 40 years and 120,000 miles old and held together with heat shrink).
- - -TR7 Spider - - - 1978 Spitfire- - - - 1976 Spitfire - - 1988 Tercel 4X4 - Kali on Integra - 2013 Volt - Yellow TCT