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> Over Heating Starter, won't start after a commute
yellow914
post Apr 22 2009, 05:51 PM
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Starter is apparently over heating during my commute (which it didn't do for the past year)

(1).What's the cause? (yes I know heat...why I odda (IMG:style_emoticons/default/chair.gif) )

(2). Is the only cure a new starter?......or...?

(3). I also have an interesting idle also...the "warmer" the car the lower the idle?

Help Por-favor : (IMG:style_emoticons/default/driving.gif)
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Jeffs9146
post Apr 22 2009, 06:05 PM
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Ahhhhh the infamous Hot Starter Not Worky problem HSNW for short (IMG:style_emoticons/default/blink.gif)

This a normal 914 problem and there are a few solutions.

1. Add a Ford solinoid next to the starter

2. Take apart the starter solinoid and clean it very well (this may buy you a bit more time but it will fail again)

3. Replace the starter

I will try to find a link to how to wire the solinoid

Here it is Solinoid install
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914Sixer
post Apr 22 2009, 06:07 PM
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Options:
High torque starter
72-up 911 starter
Starter Upgrade Kit.

New starter is my favorite because they bolt in. Kit calls for installing and wiring.
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r_towle
post Apr 22 2009, 06:30 PM
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The main problem is that your electrical connections are dirty.
Clean the grounds, battery to body, and the tranny ground strap.

Clean the positive lead at the battery and at the starter.

High heat creates more resistance in electrical circuits.

Rich
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charliew
post Apr 22 2009, 07:02 PM
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Sounds like the aircooled vw starter too far from the battery and too many connections syndrome that vw guys have been fixing forever. On my bugs in the early 70's I just modded a horn relay and put it by the battery under the seat and ran the battery solenoid wire through the relay to the battery. The ign. sw. triggered the relay. The ford relay is huge a horn relay is very small. You gotta take it apart and ground one side of it's coil to make it work. The relay doesn't carry the cranking volts it just carries the solenoid amps, the solenoid carries the cranking amps.
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r_towle
post Apr 22 2009, 07:13 PM
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Please dont add the relay, its just masking the issue.
The car is 35 years old...sometimes you need to clean the corrosion on the battery terminals and the main cables...thats all...its simple.

Rich
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Jeffs9146
post Apr 22 2009, 07:24 PM
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QUOTE
sometimes you need to clean the corrosion on the battery terminals and the main cables...thats all...its simple.


I have delt with this many times and it comes down to the starter solinoid that is built into the starter is failing. You have the choice to fix it right or just fix it! It is your call!! It is your car!! Sometimes the connections can be cleaned to give the old solinoid enough juice to go for a while longer but it will fail at some point. Sometimes the dirty connections are what caused the failure in the first place. Either way you can fix it depending on your needs. The best method is to clean the connections then replace the starter. Next would be clean the solinoid, this is the cheepest but will not last. Last would be the external solinoid for a cheap easy fix for a car that is just being driven.

$.02
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DBCooper
post Apr 23 2009, 05:40 AM
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QUOTE(r_towle @ Apr 22 2009, 05:13 PM) *

Please dont add the relay, its just masking the issue.


Sure, clean the terminals, do the simplest thing first, but the way it was was done by the factory is an old-fashioned and lousy way to wire a car. Once you put in a Ford solenoid there is no more problem from heat, so if the starter begins to fail really a bad starter.
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charliew
post Apr 23 2009, 11:12 AM
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On old chevs you could disassemble the solenoid and turn the copper washer around and turn the contacts around and get more life out of them. The copper washer would be worn down all around it's outer edge and the contacts for the wires would be worn down on one side. High amperage does that. On the vw starters I never tried to repair one. The deal is the solenoid engages the big amp contacts to supply the starter high current load to turn the starter and when the contacts get worn it takes more current to get it to work and that makes more heat and it progressively get worse. That is only the inside of the starter problem. The vw problem is the long distance of the start circuit. It starts at the battery, in the back, goes forward to the ign sw, in the front, then goes back to the back right beside the battery to the starter. On a bug it's about a foot between the two. All the connections including the ign sw get old and tired like me. A trigger using this long circuit works much better if it only needs to energize a small relay that in turn has a very short circuit from the battery to the starter, about 2 feet versus maybe 12 feet. When things get hot the resistance goes up and reduces current flow. Why not improve a 60's wiring circuit to 2009? It doesn't require the huge ford relay unless you are try to replace the 914 solenoid completely and that won't fix the long ign sw circuit.
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SUNAB914
post Apr 23 2009, 12:54 PM
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Not much description of your problem. How are you sure it's the starter and not the ignition switch? These cars are old, the ignition switch will crack and that will give you intermitting starting problems. I've never had a starter go bad on all 4 of the 914's I've owned, but I have had to replace the plastic ignition switch on 3 of them. Always cured the problem, and clean your grounds as stated above. Now, knock of wood my starter will give out. Let us know what you find.
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charliew
post Apr 23 2009, 10:35 PM
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The 914 wiring is designed exactly like the bug they have the same problem.
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MBowman325
post Apr 24 2009, 09:03 AM
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Failing all of the above, you could just carry a sheet and a hammer in the car.... Or park facing downhill.


I wound up going with a mini-starter on mine when the problem came. Many starts later and I've only had one no-start condition, which was not related to the starter.

All your options are here. None are really mutually exclusive. I'd replace the starter (as that's what I did), but you may have at which ever path you feel comfortable with. I've heard over from people here with opinions that I trust, that a relay, while it'll work, masks the issue, which is at least partly true.
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DBCooper
post Apr 24 2009, 09:20 AM
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Maybe a quibble but I don't know why you'd call it "masking" the issue, since you end up with a semblance of modern wiring and an engine that starts every time. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif)
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r_towle
post Apr 24 2009, 09:53 AM
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I wish I could somehow type the sound you make when you stick your tongue out and blow hard....like nana nana na na...but more of the fun, joking yet poo poo of your idea.

The relay does not help the lack of a decent ground wire.
If your ground suck..a relay wont fix that.

Rich
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Cupomeat
post Apr 24 2009, 10:01 AM
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Well, regarding the relay masking, etc. I had this problem after a long drive when everything got really hot.

If I jumped the starter wires it would turn over, but not so from the key.

I did all the normal cleaning/adding a ground, and starter replacement with a Bosch unit and it still would not work.

SO, i put the relay in and it hasn't given me a problem since.
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swl
post Apr 24 2009, 08:40 PM
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I'm with Rich. If a relay 'fixes' the problem then the problem is in the wiring not the solenoid. All the relay is doing is bringing a reliable 12V to the terminal of the solenoid. 12V is 12V regardless whether it is coming off a secondary relay or coming off a key. The problem that the relay is fixing is voltage drop due to contact resistance somewhere in the path from the battery to the key, back to the relay board and then down to the solenoid, from the solenoid to the ground ground strap and body to the other side of the battery. That's a long route! So when the solenoid is engaged it draws a pretty heavy current. That current cause the voltage drop at any point where there is contact resistance. Final result is you get less than 12v at the terminal of the starter. Once it drops below a certain threshold it will not be enough to fire it.

What the relay is going to do is greatly reduce the current and therefore reduce the voltage loss along the route. Voltage stays up at the terminal of the relay, relay fires, gives a solid 12v to the solenoid even under heavy current - solenoid fires.

Relay will make the system reliable but it is sort of the lazy fix. To do it right you have to find out where the voltage drops are along the route and find where you need to clean. This can only be done reliably under load.

One of these days I'm going to draw a diagram to show this but the easiest way to get the idea is to measure directly across the battery when you are trying to crank. Then measure from the yellow wire on the starter to the transmission. I'll wager you will see a significant difference in the 2 voltages.
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smooth_eddy
post Apr 24 2009, 08:54 PM
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I had the same problems. The best solution (in my opinion) is to buy the mini starter from eBay. It's about 120 bucks with free shipping. It will be the end of your hot start problems. It also works when the car has sat for a long time and the battery charge is not the best. I ripped out the the PO's relay package. It is kind of a Mickey Mouse band aid solution.

Eddy
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klink
post Apr 24 2009, 09:08 PM
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Funny story. I had bought a '72 new off the showroom floor. My girl friend (and she still is) who is my wife now of 32 years and I dated and had a a lot of great times with the 914. I remember we pulled up to the local hangout restaurant and we had just gone over the 36K warranty on the car. We had dinner and went to leave and sure enough it wouldn't crank over. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/mad.gif) Went back into the restaurant and acquired a butter knife. Got under the car and jumped the solenoid and fired it right up. Away we went and kept the butter knife in the center console. Used that butter knife many times. She used to drive it alot and many times she was with friends and it wouldn't start and she would just say "just a minute, I've got this handled". She'd crawl under the car and fire it right up. Later I had heard of the hard start solenoid but just never got to installing it. I'd have to say stupid stories like these are what endear these crazy little cars to our hearts. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/wub.gif)
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porsha916
post Apr 24 2009, 09:16 PM
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1 Go to Walmart buy a #6 wire about six feet long (about $3.00) attach to the body ground where the battery is attach, the other end attach to the starter bolt that holds the stater on, clean before attaching.

2. Put a cork gasket between starter the engine, run a heavy gauge to both sides, this should cut heat transfer.

Take Care
Bill
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Cupomeat
post Apr 24 2009, 09:19 PM
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No doubt that the resistance of the circuit and subsequent voltage drop to the solenoid is what causes the hot start "click" problem. No doubt you are right.

I guess my point is that, if all those parts have been confirmed to be working correctly, and the problem still exists, I have two options.
1. Start replacing the parts that came with the car with beefier units, larger gauge wire, and better plating on contacts.
2. put the relay in.

So, if it is masking, so be it, but I made a good faith effort and verified all components were working properly.
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