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Starter Issues on 1500

15K views 21 replies 6 participants last post by  94Vulcan88  
#1 ·
Hi Guys,
My son just bought a 1989 1500A. The previous owner said that it would run but the starter drags. When we brought it home I put a new starter on the bike and the new starter would still drag real slow. I thought it might be a weak battery so I purchased a new battery but when I installed the new battery all the bike would do is "click" when the starter button was pressed. Thought I might have a bad new batt. and had it tested and it tested out fine. Put the old batt back in and back to slow cranking. New batt. back in and "click". Purchased another new battery and it just "clicks" the solenoid also. Could this problem be indicative of a weak solenoid? Never heard of one doing this before.
 
#2 ·
First thing to check is if you got a new battery that has the umph to turn it. Next is to make sure you are getting a good solid connection on your battery and on the other side of the cables too.

Then after that take a multi-meter and check your voltages at each connection starting at your battery, then on to the next until you get to your starter. If you notice a drop in power go back to the previous connection and double check. That should narrow you down to the problem if it is there.
 
#6 ·
I'm having the same problem on my '94; starter relay clicks and that's it. Prior to this happening, it would take some trying to get the scoot started. Unfortunately I can't be of any help as I'm still troubleshooting and am a novice when it comes to electrical systems. But I will be following this thread so good luck!
 
#9 ·
Ok, I put my meter on the battery and the battery reads 12.5volts when I bump the start button it drops to 5 volts. Reads the same on both sides of the solenoid when the starter button is pushed. I now notice that the positive side of the battery cable gets extremely hot just from bumping the starter button and checking with the meter.
 
#12 ·
Couple of things that can cause your battery voltage to fall like that:

1. Bad battery.
2. Starter is stalled.

I do not think that corroded wire is the issue.

Could you do the following:

1. Take a voltage reading across the battery.
2. Turn on key. Take another reading.
3. Leave key on for a full five minutes, then take another reading.

Post back with the three readings.
 
#10 ·
Well, not saying you should do it, but if it were me, I'd bypass the solenoid and jump directly to the starter. If the starter flies over at that point then I'd have to seriously be looking at the solenoid or the cables going to it. Cables may look fine but sometimes if you peel back the cover you'll find a lot of corrosion which can cause this problem.
 
#14 ·
You probably replaced the solenoid and cable needlessly.
You are going to have to pull the right side engine cover off and check the starter clutch, torque limiter and associated gear train for a problem.
The starter is being put under heavy load and that is why battery voltage falls so much and cable gets hot.
If the engine turns over easily by pushing in gear, then the trouble seems to be in this area.

Post back with your findings.
 
#16 ·
I do not like to see a battery drop below 12v after 5 minutes.
Your battery is just marginal, or partially discharged.
Make sure it is charged and then try again.

This is a quick and dirty test and not meant to catch all types of battery failures, but can give you a general state of the union.
 
#19 ·
Keep us posted, I'd like to see what the final outcome of this is. After chasing an electrical gremlin in the wifes 97 1500 for 2 years, I finally got everything good to go. I just don't like the way hers turns over. I feel it should spin quicker than it does, so maybe hers is a mechanical problem also. I was leaning towards the solenoid but everything tests fine. Mind you her battery doesn't die any longer, I fixed that, it just spins slower than I think it should.