laika
Well-Known Member
I can confirm boater sam's recommendation that LRE are very nice people to deal with. Obviously they have to make a living so they weren't as cheap as ebay for pattern part but they helpfully explained the differences and located 2 suppliers for the genuine hitachi part in the netherlands with different prices and delivery times. Without being steered that way I decided to go for the hitachi (more than twice as much as the pattern part but considerably less than half the yanmar price including expedited delivery). LRE dealt with all the import stuff and I had the starter in my paws by saturday.
And I now have a spare starter because that wasn't the problem
After fitting the new starter and failing to get a win and thinking this now might be a battery problem I moved around my old engine battery and one of the new "house" batteries (note to self: there's a lesson learned from previous episodes of battery fun that I should have some long, thick cables made up to save having to physically move batteries around). Still no joy. So all connectors( by the engine and by the panel) have been pulled apart, checked and squirted with contact cleaner. The fuse in the panel is fine (I checked it but if it wasn't I wouldn't have power to the panel). I was drawing a blank. Having first mate with me I decided to try checking voltages at the starter terminals when the key was turned. I stuck the volt meter between the terminal where the "strap" goes from the starter solenoid to the starter and ground, first mate turned the key and...vrooom! Huh? Did I accidentally short between the 12v? I don't think so (I was careful, rubber boot was over the power terminal, no spark and multimeter probe still intact). Killed the engine. Waited a few minutes. Turned the key...vroom! So now I have a lurking problem I can't reliably reproduce.
My best guess then is that this is a problem with a sticky secondary starter relay (I need to physically find it...) though don't know why my shorting the terminals previously didn't get the starter to turn: maybe I whipped away the screwdriver too quickly. And goodness only knows why the multimeter tipped it into working again.
Regarding my question about "so what should I expect when I 'remove the starter'"...bear in mind I have little mechanical experience. Until you see a part separate from the engine it's hard to know which bits are engine casing and which bits detach as a unit. Obviously now I know
And I now have a spare starter because that wasn't the problem
After fitting the new starter and failing to get a win and thinking this now might be a battery problem I moved around my old engine battery and one of the new "house" batteries (note to self: there's a lesson learned from previous episodes of battery fun that I should have some long, thick cables made up to save having to physically move batteries around). Still no joy. So all connectors( by the engine and by the panel) have been pulled apart, checked and squirted with contact cleaner. The fuse in the panel is fine (I checked it but if it wasn't I wouldn't have power to the panel). I was drawing a blank. Having first mate with me I decided to try checking voltages at the starter terminals when the key was turned. I stuck the volt meter between the terminal where the "strap" goes from the starter solenoid to the starter and ground, first mate turned the key and...vrooom! Huh? Did I accidentally short between the 12v? I don't think so (I was careful, rubber boot was over the power terminal, no spark and multimeter probe still intact). Killed the engine. Waited a few minutes. Turned the key...vroom! So now I have a lurking problem I can't reliably reproduce.
My best guess then is that this is a problem with a sticky secondary starter relay (I need to physically find it...) though don't know why my shorting the terminals previously didn't get the starter to turn: maybe I whipped away the screwdriver too quickly. And goodness only knows why the multimeter tipped it into working again.
Regarding my question about "so what should I expect when I 'remove the starter'"...bear in mind I have little mechanical experience. Until you see a part separate from the engine it's hard to know which bits are engine casing and which bits detach as a unit. Obviously now I know
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