Did you state keyed or standard military switch? Either way a fouled switch could hang in the start position and keep the solenoid engaged. On start, 24 volts goes straight thru box to starter solenoid coil. Any box if water damaged can have shorts and failure point. Not seeing it is hard to say. Your SSI box electronics does not process the start signal.
Flex plates have been known to crack... and in such a way that may not run parallel to the pinion. When trying to disengage, pinion get bound up. One of the pictures I saw, had a couple of chewed up teeth. If mine, and another no fun day...the ring gear / flex plate would have been replace. IMO.
This can be very frustrating and $$$$. Need to eliminate the above switching / mechanical issues if present. Any further testing, I WOULD use a remote start test button, right on the solenoid with my eyes and ears on the problem, Bright light too.
Don't need a old computer to start an old truck. We understand the start box at Camoteksystems.com CAMO
Hey Camo,
Was actually going to give you a call on Monday, I’ve seen your box before and figured I’d get one if mine ever bit the dust.
A brief history on my start switch dealings:
Original switch: started the truck fine up until a few weeks ago when I started this thread. It never fully turned to “start” but seemed to work
New switch 1 from Kascar: wrong alignment keyway position
New switch 2 from Kascar: I put the switch into “start”, heard something snap inside of it, and then it wouldn’t come out of “start”. Off the truck of course, would be really bad if it were on the truck
Original switch off friend’s truck: Operated perfectly and no issues that I knew of
New switch 3 from Mac Motors: The current one I’m dealing with and not sure of its status. It turns fine, but for some reason the lever screw controls how much friction there is when turning the switch. No other switch I’ve dealt with has been that way
New switch 4 from Kascar: currently still pending arrival, they’ve been back ordered
All of these are the standard military switch, manufacturers unknown. I’ve read enough about the keyed ones to avoid them.
What I’ve learned: start switches for these things are elusive little gremlins that don’t properly pass angry pixies across the wire
I don’t want to drop the transmission and replace the flex plate to end up back at the same place grinding more teeth either, so here are my thoughts
1: replace the starter again since this one is clearly cooked
2: leave the dust/inspection cover off the truck for a while
3: manually verify each start and visually check that the bendix still isn’t engaged. I’ve got a mirror and a flashlight, should be easy enough
4: compare between my friend’s start switch and the one I just put in, and then deduce what’s happening. Check startups from both switches for at least a week
Not very scientific but it makes sense to me I suppose