In a message dated 5/7/00, Wake074@aol.com writes:
> I seem to be getting consistent spark, although not very strong.  When I 
>  crank the starter, the voltage at the coil drops considerable down to 
around 
>  4 volts.  This is certainly causing the weak spark.
Glenn,
This is not normal.  A healthy battery and starter system should not drop 
below 9 volts during cranking.  A normal, modern car will not go below 10 
volts.  Possible culprits include: weak battery, weak cabling & connections, 
dying starter motor(draws too much current, but doesn't turn over the 
engine), mechanical problem inside the engine causing excessive load for 
starter.
  
>  I pulled all the spark plugs and tried rolling the engine over that way.  
It 
>  spun at a better speed (closer to normal), and the voltage at the coil 
>  dropped to only 9 volts.  The engine seems to be free, ie. it mores with a 
>  wrench on the crankshaft sprocket.
If you can turn it over fairly easy w/ a wrench, then it is not a bad engine. 
 Also, the dropping to 9 volts when cranking w/ no plugs sounds suspect.  An 
engine w/ no plugs will crank real easy and real fast.  There isn't enough 
load to drop chassis voltage below 11V.
I'd say you have a starter or cable problem.  Have a helper turn the key and 
crank the engine while you check for voltage drop along the positive lead and 
the ground path.
Thanks,
Jim Chenoweth
Lancaster, Ohio, USA
Mailto: fj40jim@aol.com
Ph. 740.862.2604
 
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