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RS13 wrote:Whack a multimeter on the starter motor, see if the solenoid feed is getting 12V when the key is turned? The engine still turns over by hand aye?
Steelo wrote:RS13 wrote:Whack a multimeter on the starter motor, see if the solenoid feed is getting 12V when the key is turned? The engine still turns over by hand aye?
This is pretty weird - the starter is getting 12v with no key in the ignition
then it stays at 12v when the key is turned...
RS13 wrote:Steelo wrote:RS13 wrote:Whack a multimeter on the starter motor, see if the solenoid feed is getting 12V when the key is turned? The engine still turns over by hand aye?
This is pretty weird - the starter is getting 12v with no key in the ignition
then it stays at 12v when the key is turned...
As above, the positive battery lead goes to the starter. In the picture below, the top nut should have the fat battery lead attached, whereas the small tab to the right of the bottom nut should have a small wire attached via spade terminal, this is what you need to check for 12V when the key is turned to ignition on.
RS13 wrote:Hmm, odd. The acid test for that is to get a small wire, connect one end to the postive terminal on the battery, and the other end to the small wire/terminal on the solenoid that has the 0v.. this is manually engaging the starter, so make sure the car is in park and your hands aren't near pulleys.
You've checked the underbonnet fuse box as well as the one under the dash for blown fuses? I'd try and pull codes next, bridge TE1 and E1 in the diagnostic box in the engine bay, switch ignition to ACC and count the CEL flashes for codes.
Steelo wrote:
I cranked it with the key in the acc position but it still didn't start
touge rolla wrote:Steelo wrote:
I cranked it with the key in the acc position but it still didn't start
Possibly you just made a mistake when typing this but, key needs to be in the "on" position...
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