My issues started weekend before last. Boat started and ran fine most of the day, after stopping to swim for a bit at the end of the day, when we got ready to leave hit the key and the starter did nothing, no click, nothing. Batteries are good, gauges and everything works. Just nothing from the starter. I hit on it a few times and after about 30 minutes of dinking with it, it finally fired up. This past week I replaced the starter suspecting that was the culprit. Out on the water yesterday and the boat ran great, stopped and started about 15 times during the course of the day, then towards the end of the day, same issue. Only this time I could not get it to start again. Stranded on the water for about 5 hours until we could get help. Finally got it home and in the driveway, hit the key and it fired right up. If I don't find a solution to this problem, I don't think my wife will go back out with me again. Hoping for some ideas here because I am at a loss.
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Yes there is a solenoid on the new starter. There is the main wire coming off the starter that is connected to the battery, but there is also a fused wire coming off the same terminal on the starter. Does anyone know if that leads to a slave solenoid somewhere? I have the 350 Mag MPI engine.
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If main wire is going straight to battery has to be something in ignition switch or wire from the switch to the solenoid. Or the natural safety switch could be acting up, which more than likely the case vs ignition switch. Hopefully someone will chime in that knows your motor wiring better than I do. I don't know if there is a good way to test that safety switch or not. Or if there is other sensor (low oil, ect..) that could be acting up.
Fused wire would be for other engine acc/ignition/fuel pumps.
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That one you are talking about powers something else. You need to look for the 10-12 gauge wire coming off of the terminal next to the battery cable. It's the crank wire. There may also be a starter solenoid, relay, safety switch, or the neutral switch inline in that circuit that's keeping power from reaching the starter.
Next time, instead of staying stranded for 5 hours, take a wire and touch the battery terminal on the starter to the crank terminal on the starter. Do this with the key on. The boat should fire right up if there is a switch problem in the crank circuit. If you don't make good contact with the terminals it will spark a bit so make sure you are aired out well/no gas fumes.
If you do this and the engine does not crank over, there is an issue with the starter, batteries, or cables. If it cranks over good, but does not start, you forgot to turn the ignition (key) switch on, or you have another issue with power not going to the engine, which would be your problem to begin with, probably your key switch failing.
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Just to follow up with that, if you jumped the B terminal to the M terminal in this picture, the starter motor would spin without engaging. If you jumped the B terminal to the S terminal and the starter motor spun without engaging you need a new starter or rebuild.
I believe you said already replaced it and are still having the problem? What happens if you jump the new starter? Any chance you could have jumped the B to the M?
Starter_pic.jpg
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Sorry to rehash this thread
My issue seems similar. When I turn the key, it is hit or miss whether or not the starter will crank. Usually the worst is when its cold and it tends to fire up more consistently when its been running.
Did you replace the solenoid on the engine and was that the fix? Can you point me to where it sits and/or what that looks like? I'd like to start there before replacing the starter.
Thanks
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