lakespirit
Silver Member
I was trying to start it and the starter sounded like it was dragging and sort of ginding. Then I blew the main fuse. After I replaced the fuse, it just makes a click in the solenoid (I think). Any ideas?
Fuses blow because of an electrical short. But if your replacement fuse didn't blow, the condition was apparently temporary. That can happen when the 12v leads to the starter and/or solenoid are loose. You can get a spark gap that jumps to ground.lakespirit said:I was trying to start it and the starter sounded like it was dragging and sort of ginding. Then I blew the main fuse. After I replaced the fuse, it just makes a click in the solenoid (I think). Any ideas?
Mine's not here at the moment, so I am not sure about right and left. But I've got the wiring diagram. It shows 30A on one end, next to it is a 3A, the other three are 10A.lakespirit said:...no clue how to do the resistance checks.... ... Is it really a 30 amp on the fuse at the far right as you're sitting on the seat?
Behind the intake manifold, above the fuel injectors. There are three of them, tied together electrically with either a copper buss bar or a series of jumper wires.lakespirit said:OK, here's the duh question of the day. And the glow plugs are located exactly .....?

No on the glow plug, yes on the connection. A clean but loose connection is still classified as a bad connection. The usual cause for this is where the lug is poorly crimped and/or badly soldered onto the wire. Another cause could be wire damage somewhere up the line.lakespirit said:I cleaned everything, yet still get the one click. Can this be caused by a defective glow plug OR bad connection?
