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AE85.6 wrote: Also I saw some on trade me saying 10 tooth and some 11 tooth so thought more teeth, more reduction and easier crank ?
mikeBrotherd wrote:Yes if you remove a 10T, you replace it with a 10T.....generally...
allencr wrote:Lower ratio/higher number, less starter load, IS NOT getting a starter with more teeth!
matt dunn wrote:allencr wrote:Lower ratio/higher number, less starter load, IS NOT getting a starter with more teeth!
On paper you'd think it makes a difference,
in the real world it does not.
They are the most common starters we see.
We run 5 of them as exchange units at work,
and send them out and get them back without knowing what version you get back. Have never had a problem in 16 years and you cant tell hear or measure the difference between the starters.
The load on them usually makes no difference as the contact wear out 10x more than anything to do with the load on the motor.
Only thing that affects the life is normally the number of times you start it,
not the load on them.
AE85.6 wrote:, but adly the starter is still sticking from time to time.
AE85.6 wrote:MAGN1T,
Ute is a manual,
When you say common wiring issues what should I be checking ?
I could not see anything obviously loose or anything, I was planning to clean all the earths and make sure any other connections are tight and not oily or corroded looking but have not as yet.
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