Rio_Grande
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Dec 11, 2007
- Messages
- 555
I have been fighting a cold weather starting issue for some time now. This 574 is only used occasionally to unload pallets of material. About 3 times a year I have to have it in 20 deg weather. Actually try not to use it due to the hard starting.
The battery is new as of a couple years ago, tests out good, brand new cables on it this time last year. Got a new key switch today due to me breaking the old one. 2 years ago when this started I had the starter rebuilt at a starter shop. It seemed to fix the problem however winter ended about the same time. Started fine for the next year until the cold weather arrived. Then the starter would crank a few cycles maybe 15-20 seconds max then the starter would stop and whine. I took it apart and cleaned everything. Using the block heater and topping the battery off would occasionally get it started but the only cure was warm weather.
This year, block heater and battery charger topping it off got it started on a 35 deg day, but today in the 20s I couldn't get it to crank long enough to start.
Is it possible that one winding field is bad in this thing? Just seems that even cold this thing should have enough umph to crank more that 15-20 seconds. I watched one of those cold start old start videos on you tube and they crank for quite some time repeatedly before finally getting it started. Mine starts in a few cranks or not at all.
The battery is new as of a couple years ago, tests out good, brand new cables on it this time last year. Got a new key switch today due to me breaking the old one. 2 years ago when this started I had the starter rebuilt at a starter shop. It seemed to fix the problem however winter ended about the same time. Started fine for the next year until the cold weather arrived. Then the starter would crank a few cycles maybe 15-20 seconds max then the starter would stop and whine. I took it apart and cleaned everything. Using the block heater and topping the battery off would occasionally get it started but the only cure was warm weather.
This year, block heater and battery charger topping it off got it started on a 35 deg day, but today in the 20s I couldn't get it to crank long enough to start.
Is it possible that one winding field is bad in this thing? Just seems that even cold this thing should have enough umph to crank more that 15-20 seconds. I watched one of those cold start old start videos on you tube and they crank for quite some time repeatedly before finally getting it started. Mine starts in a few cranks or not at all.