Starter is not fully engaging or you may have a broken tooth on the flywheel.
The incisors (front teeth) are designed to tear or cut food, so that smaller pieces can be chewed. Once the food is in small chunks, it can be ground by the bicuspids and molars.
Basically. Gnawing is more of a front-tooth type of chewing, while plain chewing usually uses the back teeth.
"Chewed" is the past tense of "chew." It describes the action of grinding and crushing food with the teeth.
if the starter is spinning but not engaging then the bendix (starter teeth) is not moving out to grab the flywheel teeth or the flywheel has some broken teeth. The starter needs to be removed to see what the issue is.
Starter Drag is when the teeth on the starter that spin the flywheel drag. It could break teeth off of starter possibly have to replace/ rebuild starter.
Molars are large and flat teeth, rather than your canines and incisors. They are either sharp or thin. Like flour is grinded by moving stones in some cases, food can easily be chewed and/or broken down into a slop or powder. Mostly you will realise that your food (after biting it into smaller chunks with your front teeth) will usually end up being chewed at the back of your mouth.
This usually happens when the starter drive goes bad or if the flywheel has been damaged by the starter or previous starter failure. When you pull the starter to have a look, turn the flywheel and check all the teeth on it before replacing the starter.
Mexican tree chical
They chewed on bits of bark. Willow was a favorite.
is the problem,that the flywheel teeth are being chewed out and same on starter. or is the problem that starter and flywheel do not mesh properly when engaged? if either of thses is the problem,this means that the gear on the starter is not matched to the teeth on the flywheel. other problem that could be causing this is none or incorrect shims used when installing starter motor. to fix this, you need to make a mark on the flywheel(use white out or something like that),and count the number of teeth.then do same on the starter motor.then find out from a drive line specialist,how many teeth shoud be on starter motor to match the flywheel.they can also tell you the shims to be used when installing starter motor to get proper clearance.
A common problem m[ght be the starter gear teeth worn or broken or starter mounting bolts loose.
starter motor is mounted into the front of the bell housing this is also where the bolts to secure the starter go if there is a plate between starter and bell housing, it is a spacer to give correct clearance of starter gear and ring gear teeth