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Huh... Something is wrong with the starter or you're powering it wrong.
HUH ?!?!?you need power to retract the starter
Correction power to activate the solenoid.HUH ?!?!?
NOT how it works. The lower current engages the solenoid and yes it pushes out the gear. However, it also has a very large high current contactor which engages the actual starter motor. When current to the small terminal is broken the solenoid is retracted by a spring. Since the high current contactor is also retracted the power to the starter is no more and it stops turning. PERIOD.The other smaller one engages solenoid which pushes out the pinion and spins the motor when start is called for. When current to smaller terminal is interrupted the starter continues to spin.
You have a very unique starter. And I don't mean that in a good way.I agree that is how it is supposed to work. I just wish it would work that way. When current to the small terminal is broken the coil remains energized and holds the steel slug out. The spring seems like it is good and the pinion returns back where it should be with authority when the battery lead is disconnected.
When current to the small terminal is broken the coil remains energized and holds the steel slug out.
Yes I understand that, but the starter is new, never installed. When I disconnect the battery, the plunger and pinion snap back where they should be with authority. It is current in the solenoid coil that is holding the contactor in. I feel like I’m wasting everyone’s time here. The offshore aftermarket starter is defective even though it spins up fast, smooth and quietly.The "contactor" is, in simple terms, a large copper washer. The current going through it is very high and each time it contacts it sparks. When the contactor is new and clean it works flawlessly BUT with age the contacts become pitted and contaminated and will "possibly" fuse together, allowing the starter to continue to run on.
The starter has an issue period. The solenoid only pulls one way. When power is removed the unit quits spinning under power and the drive retracts mechanically. This then allows the large round contact disc to break contact from the two terminals. There is a small spring that helps push them away. There could be no spring or its messed up in some way or its binding. The starter needs to come apart. Its not rocket science.Yes I understand that, but the starter is new, never installed. When I disconnect the battery, the plunger and pinion snap back where they should be with authority. It is current in the solenoid coil that is holding the contactor in. I feel like I’m wasting everyone’s time here. The offshore aftermarket starter is defective even though it spins up fast, smooth and quietly.
That won't solve his issue.I just hooked everything up as factory with a stock relay and never an issue.