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starter motor struggles after long drives
Moderator: -Scott-
starter motor struggles after long drives
hey guys,
just a quick question.. (troopy, hj75, 2H)
i seem to have problems starting after longer trips.. short driving around town i always know it will start ok, but a longer trip (maybe 1hr plus?) the starter really struggles to kick over.
i have 2 batteries less than a year old (one close to brand new), new alternator, new regulator, all appear to be working as they should.
any simple ways i can check and be sure its a starter before forking out for a new one? or any idea what part of the starter would be faulty, if i decided to pull it to bits and have a crack at fixing myself?
or if anyone thinks other wise, any other problem it may be?
cheers, pete
just a quick question.. (troopy, hj75, 2H)
i seem to have problems starting after longer trips.. short driving around town i always know it will start ok, but a longer trip (maybe 1hr plus?) the starter really struggles to kick over.
i have 2 batteries less than a year old (one close to brand new), new alternator, new regulator, all appear to be working as they should.
any simple ways i can check and be sure its a starter before forking out for a new one? or any idea what part of the starter would be faulty, if i decided to pull it to bits and have a crack at fixing myself?
or if anyone thinks other wise, any other problem it may be?
cheers, pete
Generally speaking a warm battery will make more charge
Once we were within one crank of a dead battery, alone and over 60km from any help
An hour of the battery in the sun and we were off
Just had a similar prob with the work van and it was the earth from battery to chassis
Sure your alternator is charging right. May be charging just enough for short trips but on long trips it may not be keeping up and thus draining the batteries
Have you got a voltmeter, if so what reading are you getting when the problem occurs?
Once we were within one crank of a dead battery, alone and over 60km from any help
An hour of the battery in the sun and we were off
Just had a similar prob with the work van and it was the earth from battery to chassis
Sure your alternator is charging right. May be charging just enough for short trips but on long trips it may not be keeping up and thus draining the batteries
Have you got a voltmeter, if so what reading are you getting when the problem occurs?
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so after the long drive are you starting it straight away or some time after?
After a short drive are you starting it straight away or waiting some time.
If straight away is an issue but if your waiting it may be another issue?
After a short drive are you starting it straight away or waiting some time.
If straight away is an issue but if your waiting it may be another issue?
Hookers are like bowling balls, You pick them up, put your fingers in them, then throw them in the gutter and they come back for more.
This is my first guess - slightly dodgy joint in the starter circuit which goes high resistance when it gets hot.fool_injected wrote:Just had a similar prob with the work van and it was the earth from battery to chassis
Disassemble, clean and reassemble all the connections in the starter motor power (high current) circuit. Both +12V side and -ve side.
If that doesn't fix it, PacMan's starter bearings theory would be my second guess.
To be honest, I think both are equally likely - but cleaning connections costs less than replacing bearings.
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pongo wrote:My chev used to do this and was ign timing to advanced, Dunno why, but this was the prob.
Not sure if a 2h is a petty, but maybe worth a try
2H is diesel.
Check the earths and connetions, as Fool said. Then check your starter motor.
Layto....
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