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#1 |
Factoy Five Roadster
Join Date: May 2000
Location: Sevier Co,Tennessee
Posts: 1,681
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![]() Go to auto zone and have them check your alternator, its free.
If its good then id say your starter is gone.
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Frank |
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#2 | |
Registered Member
Join Date: Nov 1998
Location: Houston, Tx.
Posts: 3,887
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![]() Quote:
Rev
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'66 Coupe, 306, 350-375 HP, C-4, 13.07 e.t., 104.8 mph, 1/4 mi. O.B.C. #2 '66 coupe |
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#3 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Mar 1999
Location: Ventura, California
Posts: 8,981
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![]() Odds are it's one of three things:
1) One or both battery cables aren't tight enough. 2) A failing generator. 3) A small drain on the system. I suspect it's number 3. If it was the generator, a jump start wouldn't sufficiently charge the battery enough to last for a few days. The car would have trouble starting the next time you tried. What I would do if I were you is to get a simple test light, disconnect the negative battery cable from the battery, attach the alligator clip from the test light to the negative cable terminal, and touch the tip of the test probe to the negative post on the battery. Make sure everything in the car is turned off, and that the doors are closed. If the test light lights up at all, you have a drain on the battery somewhere. The next step is to have a friend hold the test light to the battery post, watching the light, while you remove the fuses one by one until the test light goes out. When that happens, you will know which circuit the short is in, and you can start looking for it. Make sure that the doors are closed when ever you do this, including when you pull the fuses. If a door is open, the dome light will create a drain, and light up the test light, giving you false results. Take care, ~Chris
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Webmaster: Rice Haters Club Jim Porter Racing Peckerwoods Pit Stop Support Your Local
RED & WHITE! |
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#4 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Valparaiso, IN USA
Posts: 56
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![]() Check to make sure your engine and chassis are grounded. Don't take it for granted that with all that metal bolted together it has to be grounded, it may not be. One way to check is take the negative jumper cable, attach one end to the negative post of the battery and the other end to a good ground on the engine, then try to start the car. If it starts, it's a ground problem. It tha'st the problem you can fix it by running a second ground cable directly from the battery to somewhere on the engine (like a intake manifold bolt. Be sure it's not a painted area or aluminum.
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