Ok. So today I come out from the grocery store and hop in my truck, turn the ignition key and: Rrrr...Rrr.....Clickety....click-click-click.
Gawd!! I'm a trained and experienced auto mechanic but that isn't exactly helpful at that moment. You're only as good as the tools and test equipment you have on hand and my shop is miles away. Also the training to diagnose any starting/charging system makes you aware that it could be any number of expensive parts. (Groan...)
What is it this time is a question that would have to wait until I get to diagnose it myself. There's an auto shop just down the street which can hook up to the truck and supposedly diagnose the system for $45 but I've been there and done that in other vehicles. The end result was a bill for hundreds of dollars for replacing multiple expensive parts because the diagnostic machine couldn't figure out just which part was bad. Couldn't get there anyways cause the darned truck won't start in the first place. Didn't want to waste one the the AAA tows to have the truck moved 4 city blocks.
Ok..Got jumper cables. Time to dig them out of the compartment, open the hood, and stand there in the rain with them in hand with a "please come to my aid o gentle being" look on my face. Is it the battery? What about the starter?? Could it be my alternator? I'd rather do that than the starter with all than crawling under the truck....Gawd!!!!!
So I tried something I learned a long time ago from a fellow mechanic. He called it "The Abundant Ground." I clipped the jumper cable negative to the proper battery post and then connected the other negative end to a known good ground point on the engine. Turned the ignition key again and Click-Vroom-Vroom. Yeah!!!! (There's just something menacing about being in a parking lot with a non-functional vehicle....seen way too many scary movies I guess.)
Back at the shop I did all the proper system checks and they were within acceptable ranges. But then when I shut the engine off and tried to restart it I got the Click-click-click again. Did the "abundant ground" technique and then "vroom-vroom". So it was a repeatable problem with a repeatable solution. I did a resistance check of the negative battery cable to the engine block and got continuity and a low resistance reading. Hah!! Been there before so I know that even though the test equipment may say there's a good connection, when the large currents needed to operate the starter need to pass through it just doesn't happen. Removed and cleaned the cable to engine block connection and everything worked time after time again and again.
Call it a day. A good day where I didn't have to buy a new battery, starter, alternator and install them. Free from tow trucks, auto repair shop lobbies, and the bills. I did have to clean a connection and I won't moan about that. But I found that problematic connection/cable by using the "Abundant Ground" technique. I tried it and it worked to get me out of the parking lot. Same technique would work on our bikes in a similar situation where there was a starting problem related to a faulty ground connection. Might save some people a lot of chasing down gremlins and trying to fix the problem by throwing in new batteries and the like.
For the record I would have called the technique the "Redundant" ground. But that's not what the guy who showed it to me called it. Gonna stick that name. Thanks to you, "James."
Gawd!! I'm a trained and experienced auto mechanic but that isn't exactly helpful at that moment. You're only as good as the tools and test equipment you have on hand and my shop is miles away. Also the training to diagnose any starting/charging system makes you aware that it could be any number of expensive parts. (Groan...)
What is it this time is a question that would have to wait until I get to diagnose it myself. There's an auto shop just down the street which can hook up to the truck and supposedly diagnose the system for $45 but I've been there and done that in other vehicles. The end result was a bill for hundreds of dollars for replacing multiple expensive parts because the diagnostic machine couldn't figure out just which part was bad. Couldn't get there anyways cause the darned truck won't start in the first place. Didn't want to waste one the the AAA tows to have the truck moved 4 city blocks.
Ok..Got jumper cables. Time to dig them out of the compartment, open the hood, and stand there in the rain with them in hand with a "please come to my aid o gentle being" look on my face. Is it the battery? What about the starter?? Could it be my alternator? I'd rather do that than the starter with all than crawling under the truck....Gawd!!!!!
So I tried something I learned a long time ago from a fellow mechanic. He called it "The Abundant Ground." I clipped the jumper cable negative to the proper battery post and then connected the other negative end to a known good ground point on the engine. Turned the ignition key again and Click-Vroom-Vroom. Yeah!!!! (There's just something menacing about being in a parking lot with a non-functional vehicle....seen way too many scary movies I guess.)
Back at the shop I did all the proper system checks and they were within acceptable ranges. But then when I shut the engine off and tried to restart it I got the Click-click-click again. Did the "abundant ground" technique and then "vroom-vroom". So it was a repeatable problem with a repeatable solution. I did a resistance check of the negative battery cable to the engine block and got continuity and a low resistance reading. Hah!! Been there before so I know that even though the test equipment may say there's a good connection, when the large currents needed to operate the starter need to pass through it just doesn't happen. Removed and cleaned the cable to engine block connection and everything worked time after time again and again.
Call it a day. A good day where I didn't have to buy a new battery, starter, alternator and install them. Free from tow trucks, auto repair shop lobbies, and the bills. I did have to clean a connection and I won't moan about that. But I found that problematic connection/cable by using the "Abundant Ground" technique. I tried it and it worked to get me out of the parking lot. Same technique would work on our bikes in a similar situation where there was a starting problem related to a faulty ground connection. Might save some people a lot of chasing down gremlins and trying to fix the problem by throwing in new batteries and the like.
For the record I would have called the technique the "Redundant" ground. But that's not what the guy who showed it to me called it. Gonna stick that name. Thanks to you, "James."
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