Hey all,
I went to start my M1043A2 today, and the moment I was sort-of expecting finally came. A few weeks ago, the starter was engaged briefly while the engine was running, of course causing it to grind on the flexplate. After that, I started having rough starts where it feels that the starter isn't fully engaging into the teeth on the plate.
Today, I went to start the truck, and the starter kept stumbling and couldn't smoothly turn the engine over. I didn't attempt another start and decided to check on things.
I took off the cover over the starter to do some inspecting, here are my findings:
- The starter gear itself looks fine, all the teeth are intact and look pretty clean
- The flexplate gear is fine across a good amount of it, a few spots with minor chipped teeth, and one spot with decent chipping
- I looked at the wear patterns specifically, the flexplate indicates that the starter gear/bendix is only engaging on about half the width of the flexplate gear. The wear marks are easily visible in the attached photos
- For what it's worth, I recently re-soldered the cable that runs from the top of the engine wiring harness to the starter, thick gauge but not the thickest one going to the starter. My solder joint isn't something I'm necessarily proud of, it could be possible that this has an impact on the amount of current the bendix is getting to properly engage. I will be re-doing this soon
- Batteries are new and very strong
So with my findings, I have some questions (I would like to re-iterate that this is what I think, I am not a professional lol):
- Is there a way to adjust how far the bendix extends onto the flexplate's gear? By my rough estimates, it's only engaging half the width of the gears, and if some of the teeth are chipped, it might be trying to engage on even less than that, and stumbling because the bendix gear has beveled edges
- I know that a new flexplate would be a good idea, but I've also seen ones in worse condition in the past, would mine still be considered passable? The pics attached show the worst of the chewed up teeth, the rest are pretty good
- I know that shims exist for the starter, but based on my research, they're only to adjust the distance between the gears, not the bendix engagement travel?
- Any specific tips on checking for a weak bendix?
I'm all for documentation for the future, more than happy to provide more details.
Thanks all!
I went to start my M1043A2 today, and the moment I was sort-of expecting finally came. A few weeks ago, the starter was engaged briefly while the engine was running, of course causing it to grind on the flexplate. After that, I started having rough starts where it feels that the starter isn't fully engaging into the teeth on the plate.
Today, I went to start the truck, and the starter kept stumbling and couldn't smoothly turn the engine over. I didn't attempt another start and decided to check on things.
I took off the cover over the starter to do some inspecting, here are my findings:
- The starter gear itself looks fine, all the teeth are intact and look pretty clean
- The flexplate gear is fine across a good amount of it, a few spots with minor chipped teeth, and one spot with decent chipping
- I looked at the wear patterns specifically, the flexplate indicates that the starter gear/bendix is only engaging on about half the width of the flexplate gear. The wear marks are easily visible in the attached photos
- For what it's worth, I recently re-soldered the cable that runs from the top of the engine wiring harness to the starter, thick gauge but not the thickest one going to the starter. My solder joint isn't something I'm necessarily proud of, it could be possible that this has an impact on the amount of current the bendix is getting to properly engage. I will be re-doing this soon
- Batteries are new and very strong
So with my findings, I have some questions (I would like to re-iterate that this is what I think, I am not a professional lol):
- Is there a way to adjust how far the bendix extends onto the flexplate's gear? By my rough estimates, it's only engaging half the width of the gears, and if some of the teeth are chipped, it might be trying to engage on even less than that, and stumbling because the bendix gear has beveled edges
- I know that a new flexplate would be a good idea, but I've also seen ones in worse condition in the past, would mine still be considered passable? The pics attached show the worst of the chewed up teeth, the rest are pretty good
- I know that shims exist for the starter, but based on my research, they're only to adjust the distance between the gears, not the bendix engagement travel?
- Any specific tips on checking for a weak bendix?
I'm all for documentation for the future, more than happy to provide more details.
Thanks all!
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