1. Ignore the plugs, they aren't the problem
2. Pulling the outdrive is waaay easier than swapping the starter. Didn't see whether its a bravo or alpha, but still...
3. Didn't see how hard it is to turn by hand yet
4. Plugs out there should be very little load on that starter. 9.1v is low. Starter voltage should be the same as the battery at all times. This still smells like wiring to me. 2 more tests that you can do.
a) Run jumper cables from battery to starter (keep other wires on there)
b) Voltage drop test: Set DVM to DC volts. To test pos: Put one lead on batt pos, other end on starter pos (doesn't matter which lead goes where). Crank engine. DVM should show little/no voltage. If it's more, that means you have too much resistance between batt and starter. Test the ground side the same way.
Also, does the cranking speed up as it turns? Maybe time for a vid?
Thanks for detailed response
1. Yeah I was just letting you know I pulled the plugs just to eliminate hydrolock
2. I can pull the starter and reinstall the starter in 20 minutes . it takes me about 5
hours to do the outdrive and most of the time I feel like I'm not going to get it back on But then somehow I get lucky and at the last second it finds its way in And it kills my back lol. It's an alpha Gen 2 btw
3. I don't have any tools to turn it by hand, but I was wondering if I can use a screwdriver and try to turn it at the flywheel where the starter engages, I have taken the starter back off. I'm getting a new one in tomorrow
4. Yes it does seem like it's something in the wiring because my voltage drop is severe it goes from over 12 volts to at times 8 volts . but I do want to reiterate the new wires I made are only 4 gauge because It's what I had on hand. But I put fresh terminals and they are cut to length. I can upgrade those if you think that will make a difference. The only reason I didn't order new cables is because the original cables were at least four gauge before anyway.
And for the separate test you're basically saying use jumper cables on top of the other cables hooked up? Just to give it some extra passage? Yeah I can try that I do have some really heavy duty cables. The cranking speed does not change it's just a constant slow crank , basically what you would expect out of 9 volts. But when you stop cranking the battery returns to normal 12 . 4 or higher .
But I got a new starter coming tomorrow I'll try the jumper cable idea then because I've already pulled the starter. I really appreciate you helping me through this, one question I did have the with the starter out, is it okay to try to turn the flywheel with a flat blade screwdriver by prying on it? If so how easy should it turn