starter solenoid?
starter solenoid?Greetings to all my old friends in 305-land.
Ol' blue (62 cb77) has been running great, just had an annoying little stumble around 2500-3000 rpm. So yesterday I reset timing (left side was a little retarded, like a few degreees after tdc instead of before). Went to start to see if that fixed it and a new and apparently unrelated problem turned up: I just get a click from the starter solenoid when I hit the starter button. I charged the battery overnight (it took less than an hour to show full charge on maintainer) and tried again this morning. Still just getting a click. I checked voltage at starter terminal and was getting only a couple of volts there when I hit the button.Checked and tightened battery terminals. Checked output side of solenoid to starter and again got just two volts. So I disconnected the big wire to solenoid from battery and got perfect continuity from input to output on solenoid when button pressed. Put everything back, still just get a click. Confusing...I'm thinking maybe the contacts in solenoid are dirty, will pass enough volts/amps to show continuity but not to spin the starter? I seem to recall the solenoid can be taken apart/cleaned? Any observations/advice appreciated. I'm no expert. Thanks, Lee '62 CB77. "It's a rider."
it's not the solenoidWell it's not the solenoid. I got to thinking about it and went back and disconnected the cable from solenoid to starter, got 12 volts from solenoid when I pushed the button.
So apparently the starter is hung up somehow, drawing enough amps to pull down the voltage. Rats, that starter was rebuild by an expert 2200 miles ago. I guess I'll be searching for starter repair stuff here, I know there's a lot. If anyone would like to chime in, I'd appreciate any advice. Thanks, Lee
'62 CB77. "It's a rider."
it's the starterA reasonable thing to check, so I disconnected cable from starter, got 12 volts there when I pushed the button, then 2 volts again with cable reconnected. So that ain't it, but thanks. Checking contiuity I got 0 ohms resistance between starter terminal and ground, ie dead short. Shouldn't the starter motor have a few ohms resistance? It's sure feeling like something's shorted out in there. Thanks again for any help. Lee '62 CB77. "It's a rider."
related?Interesting...So it's possible that when I was rocking the rotor back and forth to set the timing it may have somehow jammed something up in there...and I just need to whack on it with a soft hammer...worth a try...
That doesn't explain the dead short from starter terminal to ground though, so still a bit in the dark. I guess the next thing is just to start taking it apart and see what I find. Need to study my shop manual... thanks for the help, I'll let you guys know what I figure out...Lee '62 CB77. "It's a rider."
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