Starting woes...

afast93stang

Founding Member
Jan 6, 2002
1,407
4
39
North Texas
Lately I’ve been having this problem, when I try and start the car the accessories turn on but when I go to crank it, it won’t start. At that point it seems as if it shorts out and the lights go dim. I pop the hood and wiggle the + battery cable and things come back on and then I can start it just fine.

Last night I go through the motions of doing that but it wont work. I even jump the car and nothing. I checked the grounds, replaced the + cable, the - was done a few months ago and even put in my Optima battery that I’ve been waiting on installing because I haven’t gotten a tray for it. I put it all in, it sorta cranks and things go dim. With the Optima battery in I jump it and it starts up so I drive around for about an hour to give it a good charge, get home and it wont start again, it will barely crank the engine over if that and the lights again go dim...

I’ve also replaced the starter relay, rechecked the grounds and made sure nothing is corroded. Do I have to admit that it’s my starter or should I look elsewhere?
 
Here's a checklist:

Since some of the tests will bypass the safety interlocks, make sure that the car is in neutral and the parking brake is set. Becoming a pancake isn’t part of the repair process…

Check battery, terminal connections, ground, starter relay switch (also known as solenoid) and starter in that order.

A voltmeter is handy if you are familiar with how to use it to find bad connections. Measure the voltage drop across a connection: more than .5 volts across a connection indicates a problem.
See http://www.fluke.com/application_notes/automotive/circuit.asp?AGID=1&SID=103 for help
fig-7.gif


1.) Will the car start if it is jumped? Then clean battery terminals and check battery.

2.) Check the battery to engine block ground, and the ground behind the engine to the firewall.

3.) Jump the big terminals on the starter relay next to the battery with a screwdriver - watch out for the sparks! If the engine cranks, the starter and power wiring is good. The starter relay is also known as a starter solenoid.

4.) Then pull the small push on connector (red wire) off the starter relay (Looks like it is stuck on a screw). Then jump between the screw and the terminal that is connected to the battery. If it starts, the relay is good and your problem is in the rest of the circuit.

5.) Remember to check the ignition switch, neutral safety switch on auto trans and the clutch safety switch on manual trans cars. If they are good, then you have wiring problems.
Typical start circuit...

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See http://www.autozone.com/images/cds/gif/large/0900823d80195963.gif for 88-90 year cars .OR see http://www.autozone.com/images/cds/gif/large/0900823d80195964.gif for 91-93 year cars. See http://www.autozone.com/servlet/UiB..._us/0900823d/80/1d/db/3c/0900823d801ddb3c.jsp for 94-95 model cars.

6.) The starter may be hung, loosen up the bolts that hold it on, and give it a good whack with a big hammer. Tighten up the bolts and try again.

7.) If that doesn't work, use a jumper cable from the positive lead on the battery direct to the starter post where the big wire from the relay connects. If it cranks then, it is the power wire from the relay gone bad. This will be hard to do, since there isn't much room to do it.

8.) Pull the starter and take it to Autozone or Pep Boys and have them test it. Starter fails test, then replace it. If you got this far, the starter is probably bad.