I went to start the truck today and all I here is a grinding sound. I know its electrical but im not sure what. I checked my battery connections and even cut back the + connection and fixed it, the - connection is good and solid I also tightened the connections on the battery. I looked at the cables and they appear to be good. Last I tapped the starter a bunch of times and that did nothing. Im thinking its the starter but not sure.
Any ideas?
I don't know, if you have a neutral safety switch it won't start in gear. If the flywheel is missing teeth, the starter can't grab it anymore, don't keep cranking it. You could burn up the starter. Not sure how to manually turn flywheel. I shall make a phone call.
Good judgment comes from experience... and a lot of that comes from bad judgment
You can manually turn flywheel from crank. Put a socket & wratchet on it and turn it about 1/4-1/2 turn. Then try starting it again. If it still does it, pull starter and make sure nose cone ain't broke. Does / did the motor run??
Good judgment comes from experience... and a lot of that comes from bad judgment
bigman78 wrote:Now that you mention it I have a flywheel that my dad says is missing a few teeth because it wont keep turning over. Could that be the problem....
Absolutely! With a couple teeth missing on the flywheel, there's nothing for the starter to engage into, except the broken-off teeth stubs. If you simply rotate the engine around a little bit to that the starter will be aligned with some teeth, it should turn over....at least until the flywheel rotates all the way back around and the starter hits the dead spot again.
____| \__
-O-----O- Keith
'67 F-100 2WD SWB ~ '69 F-100 4WD SWB w/7" chop ~ 1975 F-250 Ranger XLT Supercab Camper Special My '67 restoration video -> Posting and you!<-a MUST watch for all!!
One of my racing partners and I went cross country in his 396 66 chevelle and there were 12 teeth on the flex plate when we started and 3 when we got to his home 1235 miles later, We drove with the bell housing cover off and if we killed the motor one of us slid underneath and the other turned the crank at the front until we could hit teeth.
We really did the amazing, on the last stop and shutdown we had 3 teeth left and that motor hit a live cylinder and lit off on 3 teeth.
68F250 wrote:I have heard that the flywheel has a tendency to stop in the same position so the starter always chews on the same spot.
Not really it will stop in one of 8 places on a V8. The place before the next compression cycle.
4 in this 360 and the other 4 in the next what teeth it stops at is determined by the compression of each cylinder and the speed it was turning when shut off. So 8 points.
Within a couple of teeth it produces 4 broad chewed areas.. How hard did the engine hit that next compression stroke, how good is the compression in that cylinder (each cylinder compression is different by 3,000 miles of use), how fast was it turning and how much internal friction adds up to a random alignment of the teeth? That is what I am referring to.
That was why all but 3 teeth were gone from that Chevelle's flywheel. Random factor tore out teeth in several places and then more random factor caused teeth to not quite be fully engaged over and over until the flex plate was bald with a comb over.