you need to email me directly, i bet i can help fix it, probably had the same problem on my 76 360. mazurlaser@aol.com
Yes, a starter solenoid can drain a battery. When a starter solenoid is not working properly it can actually keep rotating the starter after the car's ignition is turned off. Since it requires a battery to actuate the starter, the battery will eventually be drained of power.
check your wiring, if all your wiring is good then test your ignition relay, if its not the starter, not the battery, and not the wiring there's only one thing left. Good Luck with the repair
Ignition switch going bad, corroded or loose battery cables, starter relay or starter going bad.
Could be,low battery, loose or dirty battery connections, starter is bad, starter solenoid is bad, neutral safety switch bad or out of adjustment, starter relay is bad,
No gas Ridiculous...hoping that there is gas in your car...I would say either the starter or the ignition switch. When you get the car started, take it to autozone and let them do a free diagnostic on your alternator, battery, starter and ignition module.
- dead battery - starter motor defective - low battery - ignition key problems starter, ignition problems
Ignition switch, battery, battery cables, starter relay, starter solnoid, starter, flywheel ring gear.
Most often it is the starter and not the ignition.
starter, solonoid, ignition, battery. if it clicks when you turn the key then the battery is really dead or its the starter the battery could still be jumped if its the battery.
Yes, a starter solenoid can drain a battery. When a starter solenoid is not working properly it can actually keep rotating the starter after the car's ignition is turned off. Since it requires a battery to actuate the starter, the battery will eventually be drained of power.
Dead battery, corroded or loose battery or starter cables, defective starter or starter solenoid, loose ground connection.
A starter solenoid can be bypassed by connecting a jumper wire between the battery and ignition posts on the starter. This will cause it to spin immediately without using the ignition switch.
The ignition switch completes the circuit of electricity from the battery to the starter that actually turn the engine over and starts it.The ignition switch completes the circuit of electricity from the battery to the starter that actually turn the engine over and starts it.
Seized Engine? Weak or dead battery? Loose or corroded battery cables? Bad starter solenoid? Bad starter? Bad neutral safety switch? Bad ignition switch?
If you battery has plenty of power, either faulty contacts in ignition switch or starter motor, or faulty starter motor.
The wires to the starter are probably connected wrong.
Starter, battery, battery connections, neutral switch,