Justin Smith
Well-Known Member
My car came with a Lakewood Scatter shield Bell housing. I don't know why the person who had the car before me decided to put one of these in the car for a street ride, unless he raced it at one point, who knows. Anyways, I had a starter go out on the car, So I purchased a Summit Racing Mini Starter for a 426 Hemi, people have wrote highly about these mini starters. I get the starter, bolted it exactly where the last one was bolted up and it does not reach the flywheel, it just sat there and spun. A little back round here, I do have the relocation kit for the starter for the Lakewood Bell. My flywheel is a 10.5". The top starter hole has 3 holes that I could use in the Bell housing. The top starter hole was originally in the furthest hole from the block. When I bolted the new starter in this location, it didn't reach the flywheel. So I moved it to the middle hole closer to the flywheel, it would engage, however, it barely grabbed the teeth on the flywheel. Then the starter bendix quit going into the flywheel all together. it'd spin, but not engage. I am going to have the starter checked at the local starter shop to make sure the internal parts are ok, could have received a faulty starter. I did an inspection of the teeth on the flywheel and it appeared the bendix was still just barely grabbing the teeth, because the tips of the teeth seemed to be slightly beat up, just the tips tho. the bendix gear on the starter looked fine, no damage at all. When I moved the starter to the middle hole in the bell, I took a bore scope through the clutch fork hole to look at how close the bendix would be to the flywheel before I started the car. It was already pretty close, there is no way the first hole in the bell housing closest to the block would work. Has anyone else had this kind of issue with a Lakewood Bell housing? I am not going to lie, this bell housing has been a thorn in my side from the very beginning.
Thanks Y'all,
Justin
Thanks Y'all,
Justin