SiLiconD17
Seaman Apprentice
- Joined
- Jun 21, 2007
- Messages
- 44
Hey guys, I've got a 1994 model Mariner Magnum 40hp 4 cylinder 2 stroke. When I first got it, it wouldn't start from the key and I quickly diagnosed it as a bad solenoid. So I replaced that and it fired just fine a few times, then wouldn't start off the key again. I am now on my 3rd new solenoid. I have replaced all battery cables with new ones I made including the starter ground cable and starter + cable from the solenoid. I have also installed a brand new starter thinking it was drawing too many amps and that was not it. The solenoid appears to intermittently go bad. Sometimes it will fire with the key, sometimes it won't. I've tested with a volt meter when it is in a "bad" state, and it is getting 12V to both the start switch terminals, but the solenoid never switches closed to get 12V to the other pole that runs to the starter +.
While off or on, neither of the solenoid start terminals are getting any leaked voltage (read 0V). However, once the motor cranks and is running (jumping with a screwdriver across the solenoid terminals), the bottom-most start terminal is reading 0.1-0.2V. Would it possibly be the key switch for some reason is leaking voltage onto the start wires and blowing the solenoids over time? The next thing I was going to look at was checking resistance across every cable in the harness from the key switch against every other one to see if there is a slight short somewhere in the wire harness. Do these key switches typically go bad? Any other ideas?
While off or on, neither of the solenoid start terminals are getting any leaked voltage (read 0V). However, once the motor cranks and is running (jumping with a screwdriver across the solenoid terminals), the bottom-most start terminal is reading 0.1-0.2V. Would it possibly be the key switch for some reason is leaking voltage onto the start wires and blowing the solenoids over time? The next thing I was going to look at was checking resistance across every cable in the harness from the key switch against every other one to see if there is a slight short somewhere in the wire harness. Do these key switches typically go bad? Any other ideas?