jovial_cynic Posted February 5, 2007 Report Share Posted February 5, 2007 Like most gear heads, I've got lots of boxes of misc. parts sitting around in my garage. I've got a bunch of trash pressure plate housings, various suspension bits, and a box of starters. For the last couple of years when I've worked on L-series engines, I've consistently encountered a problem trying to start the engines. I always figured it was just a bad ground, on account of the "i think i can, i think i can" behavior of the starter... it would go "rrr rrr rrr whump, rrr rrr rrr whump," and eventually kick over, but not without a long fight. As I started to put bits and pieces onto my engine, I threw the starter on it and figured I'd wind it up and see how it turns while sitting on my out-of-the-car engine stand. Incidentally, it's much easier to put a starter on the car when it's out of the car. It's also a lot easier when you have an air ratchet. Anyway, I used some jumper cables to connect the battery to the starter and cranked it... and sure enough, "rrr rrr rrr whump." Bad ground again? Bad battery? I drove my wife's minivan close enough to the stand to use the van's known-good battery, and still, the same problem. Maybe it was a bad starter. I grabbed my box of starters and began testing them. Each one worked while off the engine, but one after the other, they'd fail when bolted up. And after five starters (yes, I've got a lot of starters sitting around), I noticed that the next starter to test was bigger than the others. Bigger around. Now, I'll have you know that I've always known that I had some larger starters in my box of starters. I've known that they were there, and I've always avoided them, because... well, because my first love is computers, and in the world of computers, smaller is better because technology is always moving towards miniaturization. It turns out that starter motors don't exactly move in the direction of technology the way computers do. In the world of starters, bigger DOES equal better. And sure enough, after mounting the larger starter up, it engaged for a second and then free-spun, doing nothing. I yanked the starter off and looked at the teeth -- all worn down to nubbins. I should have looked first. Fortunately, I have THREE more large starters, one of which has good teeth, so I bolted that one up, and then... Flawless. The engine cranked over exactly as it should, ending the mystery of the starter problems in my car. Quote Link to comment
datzenmike Posted February 6, 2007 Report Share Posted February 6, 2007 Starters collect like dust bunnies don't they? I have the starter off an '84 L24 Maxima I'm dying to try someday. The original L20B one on my '78 has always worked fine, It's a direct drive, the gear on the end turns the same speed as the starter. Just for fun I put a gear reduction one from Z series motor on it to try. Make a distinctive, low metallic 'Chirp Chirp Vrooom ' starting sound. Turns over slower but maybe with a bit more authority. One Chirp when warm. Have you tried one of the gear reduced ones yet? You can see that the motor body doesn't line up with the gear on the end, and it sits (at least the one I have) close to the dipstick. Probably because the Z motors are tilted away from them. Quote Link to comment
Bleach Posted February 6, 2007 Report Share Posted February 6, 2007 the motor is offset because of the gear reduction. The Z motor is an L28. Its still an L-series and it leans the same way an L20b does. I had a gear reduction on my L18. I put it on there just because I have so many Z parts and its the cool thing to do. :D Quote Link to comment
Icehouse Posted February 6, 2007 Report Share Posted February 6, 2007 I have the starter off the L16 that came on my 4 door on my ka24e in my 620, it works great. The ka starts are really small, I didn't have one so I used the L one. It worked out though. With a 5 speed pushing is always an option. Quote Link to comment
jovial_cynic Posted February 6, 2007 Author Report Share Posted February 6, 2007 Yeah, but I can't very well push the engine while it's sitting on the frame I'm building. Maybe I should make a hand-crank that I can fit over the transmission outlet... :P Quote Link to comment
datzenmike Posted February 8, 2007 Report Share Posted February 8, 2007 Sorry, I was unclear, the gear reduction starter was from a Z series (Z22) and it is definitly tight against the dipstick tube because of engine tilt. The Maxima (L24) should fix this. It's longer so I have an elbow from Z20E to ofset the oil pressure sender out of the way, for when I do. Quote Link to comment
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