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Hi Richingalveston! Thanks for the reply.Check your engine ground strap.
Sounds like your starter is not grounded. When your starter solenoid fried it may have sent 24V to the block and if the ground strap was old and corroded it may have burnt like the fusible links.
should be located at the back of the engine passenger side.
good luck,
Rich
Hi Cpf240!Have the batteries been fully charged and load tested? All the lights going out in the crank position is one of the classic signs of a bad / low battery.
Hi Doghead!Or a bad battery cable. Test with an ohm meter and replace any that are suspicious.
Hi Warthog, Yep should have done that before I ever installed it, as its always possible.Before diving to deep, make sure the new starter relay is actually functioning. Sometimes new parts are DOA.
Yes, there was the main battery ground cable going from the buss bar to the block, the same stud as the engine ground. Is that buss bar grounded to the truck body? It looked as if it was isolated, I thought it only went to the the negative battery cables.You should have a heavy black ground cable from the - buss bar to the block on the right side rear intake nanifold stud. 2/0 would be good. I run a grond from the front intake stud on the right to the frame also 2/0 cable. Check it out.
Grounds under dash above ebrake pedal. I don't think that is the issue but check it anyway.
If the truck is still in the stock 24v/12v configuration, just make sure you only connect your ground to the driver's side alt, GEN1....Yep, I'd like to add a 2/0 ground to the alt. I have a short piece of 2/0 battery cable, from when I re-did all the battery cables on our M35-A2, which I would have used yesterday on the Alt to frame, but it wasn't long enough.
Yep, I should have mentioned that, good point.If the truck is still in the stock 24v/12v configuration, just make sure you only connect your ground to the driver's side alt, GEN1.
Yes!Yep, I should have mentioned that, good point.
As on the stock 24/12-volt setup, the Passenger side has an Isolated Ground, correct?
Yep, I use dielectric grease on bulbs and any connector that isn't soldiered. Good stuff, stops corrosion, and seals water out. Works even better with the rubber housing military connectors like on the deuce, as the rubber housing helps keep the grease in place and last longer.I don't think you can ever have enough of good grounds from the frame to the body, engine to the frame and the some good clean grounding points with some star washers on each headlamp and the tail lamps always helps. These are getting old and the ground connections are getting a little corroded. Use some dielectric grease on all the connections after you clean them. I an not saying tear the whole vehicle apart but if you are there clean and grease everything in the area you are working. Adding some LED bulbs where you can helps also. I have Truck lite electronic flashers on all my trucks.
The actual negative buss bar behind the rear battery is not grounded directly to the body.
I know I use an 11/32" mini nut driver and I am 99.99/10% sure it goes on the inside 8/32" stud closest to engine terminal. It is the first wire I put on as the starter is just laying up in there then I put the positive cable on and clock it with ears properly seated and tighten that big nut. I use a 16mm. Then I put the starter up in place and put new starter bolts in the block and tighten them. Swing the support bracket in place and put the 7/16" nut 1/4" x 20 nylok flange nut in place and tighten it and reach up with a swivel socket and tighten the M8 bolt support to block with either the oem 13mm socket of the after market 12mm socket. That my answer. The inside terminal. please try it.
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