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Guest
Guest
Cool, I think I know what you mean 
You need a good chunky ground wire from the engine to battery negative as that's how the starter motor is grounded. It gets 12v from the solenoid.
If it's just the solenoid, then you should be able to short the two solenoid terminals together to kick the starter motor over. If that works, then your solenoid is toast.
If it doesn't, then either a ground issue, starter motor issue, or the unlikely scenario is that you have a starter clutch issue or seized motor. My money's on a ground going by your comment
You need a good chunky ground wire from the engine to battery negative as that's how the starter motor is grounded. It gets 12v from the solenoid.
If it's just the solenoid, then you should be able to short the two solenoid terminals together to kick the starter motor over. If that works, then your solenoid is toast.
If it doesn't, then either a ground issue, starter motor issue, or the unlikely scenario is that you have a starter clutch issue or seized motor. My money's on a ground going by your comment


