Home > Technical (L322) > Starter motor replacement L322 TDV8 |
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ffrr14 Member Since: 21 Apr 2021 Location: Sydney Posts: 187 |
How is your starting now? SOLD | Tuned MY 2011.5 Range Rover Autobiography 4.4 TDV8 Orkney Grey | e-diff | ACC New Toy: Unimog U1550L/37 New : G350D |
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13th May 2022 8:44am |
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Shaun Member Since: 02 Jul 2010 Location: Hull Posts: 58 |
No problems with starting over the last 3 years, just other stuff!! 2004 TD6 - Gone
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14th May 2022 7:13pm |
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ffrr14 Member Since: 21 Apr 2021 Location: Sydney Posts: 187 |
Thanks,
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14th May 2022 11:43pm |
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ffrr14 Member Since: 21 Apr 2021 Location: Sydney Posts: 187 |
This is my setup, I decided to make a dedicated circuit directly from battery with a robust 200amp relay but with an Auto Reset Circuit Breaker rated @40amp (same as starter relay fuse)
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15th May 2022 8:42am |
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johnboyairey Member Since: 11 Jan 2013 Location: surrey Posts: 2032 |
So, I have done this modification, I guess as identical as Shaun’s car…and soldered in a parallel cable from the ‘x’ on this picture, through a hole in the fuse box, and run the cable down, through he wheelarch vents, and strapped it to the subframe, with some taped extra insulation on strapped cable contact points, and in to the starter motor area, and again soldered on to the trigger wire and taped all bare areas. So a parallel feed, which leaves all original wiring same, and will hopefully cure this annoying intermittent high resistance proble,. I will report back |
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15th May 2022 11:20am |
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ffrr14 Member Since: 21 Apr 2021 Location: Sydney Posts: 187 |
I think it is a design shortfall in the starter solenoid circuit which is further exposed by degrading wiring/contacts over time. SOLD | Tuned MY 2011.5 Range Rover Autobiography 4.4 TDV8 Orkney Grey | e-diff | ACC
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15th May 2022 11:50am |
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ffrr14 Member Since: 21 Apr 2021 Location: Sydney Posts: 187 |
The Crank profile looks different, i suspect it is due to inadequate solenoid contact
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15th May 2022 11:51am |
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ffrr14 Member Since: 21 Apr 2021 Location: Sydney Posts: 187 |
Update:
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20th May 2022 10:32pm |
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mezo Member Since: 13 Mar 2022 Location: Milton Keynes Posts: 22 |
Having lack of start with lowish (~12.3v with accessories on) battery - starter and battery changed and was pointed to this thread.
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24th May 2022 9:30pm |
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Phoenix Member Since: 16 May 2022 Location: Gone Posts: 1631 |
Measuring resistance on a passive circuit won't give any meaningful diagnostic clues unless the wiring is degraded significantly, volt drop measurement with a reliable meter, leads and good connections is the only way to properly diagnose these sort of issues. I use Fluke meters and dataloggers costing a reassuring amount and are calibrated every six months, i'm not sure I'd put too much faith in unverified readings from 'prosumer' level kit, even if it produces pretty graphs on a phone.
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24th May 2022 9:49pm |
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mezo Member Since: 13 Mar 2022 Location: Milton Keynes Posts: 22 |
The pretty graphs as you put it are from a cheap datalogging device and is handy to see what’s going on and keeps a history in order to try and determine any patterns or eliminate areas - it’s not a precision instrument, but it’s not bad.
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24th May 2022 10:34pm |
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Ajmngn Member Since: 25 May 2021 Location: Gloucestershire Posts: 188 |
Great job mezo, you’re definitely adding value to the forum with your approach! I really do hope your new cable gives better starting consistency and allows you to better fault find any potential charging issues on the other thread. Also, if you still get the odd no-start then it will be easy to just add a new relay to provide a 12V feed directly from battery +ve to solenoid. I’m looking forward to hearing how this fix works out for you 👍 Andy
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25th May 2022 5:32am |
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johnboyairey Member Since: 11 Jan 2013 Location: surrey Posts: 2032 |
I too have added the parallel wire, soldered in from fuse box to trigger wire, and can report that it’s works every time… I’m only a few weeks into this, and want to confirm it’s a long term fix, a bit later on. It’s certainly an easy solution. |
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25th May 2022 6:20am |
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Phoenix Member Since: 16 May 2022 Location: Gone Posts: 1631 |
I don't agree, unless the voltage being measured is shown with some sort of verifiable, repeatable accuracy, it could well be sending you off on a wild goose chase, there is also the issue of confirmation bias - 'it's always that cause, so it must be that cause in this case' type of thinking, also, I'd take issue with an indicated 9.85VDC during cranking being 'OK', it most certainly isn't, anything below 10.5VDC during cranking is an issue, on any 12V vehicle. It would be better in my view to measure volt drop end-to-end during cranking to determine if the issue is the circuit or the supply to it. |
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25th May 2022 6:26am |
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