> I believe they all have an internal solenoid.
>
> Here are some wiring options:
>
> http://britishstarters.com/Wiring_Diagram.html
FWIW, I went a different route than either diagram shows. The solenoid
inside the starter draws a good deal of current, roughly 6 times as much as
the original, and I wasn't confident of the original switch's ability to
handle the extra current (and extra kick-back) on a regular basis. I also
wanted to keep the original solenoid functional (the button on the back
comes in really handy from time to time); but it had lost part of it's smoke
when the original starter failed.
So, I used the original solenoid to switch power only to the new solenoid.
I moved all of the original wires from the top stud to the bottom stud
(making the wire to the starter hot all the time), and ran a new wire from
the top stud to the solenoid stud on the new starter.
Best of both worlds, IMO. That was in 2000, and both the switch & the
solenoid are still working great (they got moved from the wrecked TR3A to my
current TR3 along with the starter).
-- Randall
** triumphs@autox.team.net **
Archive: http://www.team.net/archive
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