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  • #16
    Oh and I got rid of my fender soleniod and just ran everything directly to the solenoid on the starter.
    2014 Ford F250 4X4 *DD*
    1992 Ford Mustang GT



    Previous Vehicles:
    1989 Ford Mustang 4 cyl. Turbo coupe
    1986 Ford Mustang GT T-Top
    2011 Ford F-150 Eco-Boost
    2011 Ford Mustang V6
    2011 Ford Mustang GT
    2013 Ford F-150 Eco-Boost
    2012 Ford F-150 Eco-Boost 4x4

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    • #17
      Originally posted by Chili View Post
      I bought an MSD coil for my Bronco a few years ago and it shit the bed after only a couple of months. I had replaced it along with the wires and plugs, but fortunately kept the old coil. After troubleshooting for 2 days I finally swapped the old one back on and it fired right up.


      msd is made in mexico now days sucks had a lot of issuses with new parts

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      • #18
        That noise is the starter solenoid. Your battery has no voltage or your connections are shit.

        Did you try the stock distributor? In the video it looks like you still got something in there with a red cap on it which to me means MSD junk.
        Originally posted by racrguy
        What's your beef with NPR, because their listeners are typically more informed than others?
        Originally posted by racrguy
        Voting is a constitutional right, overthrowing the government isn't.

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        • #19
          Originally posted by Broncojohnny View Post
          That noise is the starter solenoid. Your battery has no voltage or your connections are shit.

          Did you try the stock distributor? In the video it looks like you still got something in there with a red cap on it which to me means MSD junk.
          Battery voltage is good before and while cranking. Connections look fine. Just to rule out the distributor, I bought a replacement one and put it in. Still wouldn't spark
          2014 Ford F250 4X4 *DD*
          1992 Ford Mustang GT



          Previous Vehicles:
          1989 Ford Mustang 4 cyl. Turbo coupe
          1986 Ford Mustang GT T-Top
          2011 Ford F-150 Eco-Boost
          2011 Ford Mustang V6
          2011 Ford Mustang GT
          2013 Ford F-150 Eco-Boost
          2012 Ford F-150 Eco-Boost 4x4

          Comment


          • #20
            Originally posted by Ldecharmoy View Post
            Battery voltage is good before and while cranking. Connections look fine. Just to rule out the distributor, I bought a replacement one and put it in. Still wouldn't spark
            If you can get another set of hands, test the voltage at the solenoid while someone is cranking the car over. I'll bet it is lower than what you have at the battery.

            That noise you hear is the plunger in the solenoid opening and closing, it is a pretty classic sign that your voltage is low or the solenoid is bad. Given that this is a new starter, I am thinking voltage. It could be a connection on the hot side of the battery/starter but it can also be the ground side of your battery that is causing the problem. If the ground isn't good enough the voltage takes a dump as soon as you put a load on the system (IE, try to start the car). You want to make sure you have a ground going from the negative post of the battery to the frame and a ground coming from the engine block to the frame.
            Originally posted by racrguy
            What's your beef with NPR, because their listeners are typically more informed than others?
            Originally posted by racrguy
            Voting is a constitutional right, overthrowing the government isn't.

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            • #21
              How do your battery cables look?
              Big Rooster Racing
              1985 Mustang GT

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              • #22
                Yup, sounds like a voltage/ground issue to me, or maaaaybe a starter/flywheel alignment.

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                • #23
                  I second the idea of checking the voltage at the solenoid while cranking.

                  I had an issue like this once on a customers car. Everything looked good, battery was plenty healthy, etc. I ended up finding that the positive cable down under the car had a small slice in the sheathing. It looked fine from the outside but moisture had gotten into it and corroded the cable inside enough that not all the voltage was getting to the starter.
                  "You wouldn't know what crazy was if Charles Manson was eating Fruit Loops on your front porch"

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                  • #24
                    Bypass the MSD box, I've fixed a handful of non running cars by pulling that shit box out.
                    Putting warheads on foreheads since 2004

                    Pro-Touring Build

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