Maybe I’m just getting old...
I went for a maiden ride on my 07 max iv today after completely rebuilding the max. Gutted the tub, powder coated everything in sight, new bolts, 6 hd Argo outer bearings and six max inner bearings, made lots of little mods to make her work more to my liking. Fresh amsoil and filter and a splash of new antifreeze and away I went. She drive very well, had no problems for a 30 minute drive around the homestead. Even shut her off at one point to answer a phone call. I get back home (thankfully) and 10 minutes later hop back in and she doesn’t crank. I've got fuel and I've got power to the starter, the head lights work, but the starter will not turn over. I check both fuses under the dash and they are good and check all the other connections on the motor and it’s all good. Pull both ground straps and scratch around them (due to the powder coating) even though I know I’d done a good job scratching when I put her back together during the rebuild. I'm alone at the moment with no one to help turn the switch while I "jump" the poles on the starter, so I pull the starter. Hook it up to a battery with jumper cables and it kicks out and spins, so it’s not the problem. I go back to the dash and pull out the nest of wires to look for a bad connector. I clean a few rough looking connection spots and still have no starter. Am I missing something? The only thing that kept bugging me that I couldn’t verify was when I changed the filter on the 27 hp motor I didn’t have the factory filter. Happens that I have a 2013 Suzuki Raider SCL (1900 ci ) and have spare filters on hand. Turns out the two filters are virtually identical. Same size, same thread pitch. Only difference was the side of the filter where the threads are, the actual piece of metal that is threaded is bent inward where the factory one is bent outward. Far as I know a filter is a filter, some have the ability to retain oil when the motor is shut off and some dont. Other than that I think they are all pretty basic. All I could figure out was that maybe the motor has a sensor that notices if there is no oil flow and shuts off the system if there is concern of motor damage. That’s a farfetched idea since I drove it for a good bit and the motor didn’t shut down…but at this point I’m grasping at straws. Chances are it's the key switch, but since i didnt have the schematic to the switch i didnt want to use a jumper wire and burn it up by using the wrong fins to jump from. Any ideas?
I went for a maiden ride on my 07 max iv today after completely rebuilding the max. Gutted the tub, powder coated everything in sight, new bolts, 6 hd Argo outer bearings and six max inner bearings, made lots of little mods to make her work more to my liking. Fresh amsoil and filter and a splash of new antifreeze and away I went. She drive very well, had no problems for a 30 minute drive around the homestead. Even shut her off at one point to answer a phone call. I get back home (thankfully) and 10 minutes later hop back in and she doesn’t crank. I've got fuel and I've got power to the starter, the head lights work, but the starter will not turn over. I check both fuses under the dash and they are good and check all the other connections on the motor and it’s all good. Pull both ground straps and scratch around them (due to the powder coating) even though I know I’d done a good job scratching when I put her back together during the rebuild. I'm alone at the moment with no one to help turn the switch while I "jump" the poles on the starter, so I pull the starter. Hook it up to a battery with jumper cables and it kicks out and spins, so it’s not the problem. I go back to the dash and pull out the nest of wires to look for a bad connector. I clean a few rough looking connection spots and still have no starter. Am I missing something? The only thing that kept bugging me that I couldn’t verify was when I changed the filter on the 27 hp motor I didn’t have the factory filter. Happens that I have a 2013 Suzuki Raider SCL (1900 ci ) and have spare filters on hand. Turns out the two filters are virtually identical. Same size, same thread pitch. Only difference was the side of the filter where the threads are, the actual piece of metal that is threaded is bent inward where the factory one is bent outward. Far as I know a filter is a filter, some have the ability to retain oil when the motor is shut off and some dont. Other than that I think they are all pretty basic. All I could figure out was that maybe the motor has a sensor that notices if there is no oil flow and shuts off the system if there is concern of motor damage. That’s a farfetched idea since I drove it for a good bit and the motor didn’t shut down…but at this point I’m grasping at straws. Chances are it's the key switch, but since i didnt have the schematic to the switch i didnt want to use a jumper wire and burn it up by using the wrong fins to jump from. Any ideas?
Comment