I was lucky enough to obtain a 69 Charger last October. I bought it from a widow whose husband died last April. He owned it since 1995 and put less than 50 miles on it. Apparently a previous owner was converting it to a "racecar". Consequently a lot of the interior and unnecessary items in the engine compartment were stripped away, console, heater/AC, sway bar, etc. There are many cut off wires and plugs dangling behind the dash.
For the present I just want to make it a reliable cruiser in spite of the lumpy cam, reverse manual valve body, loose converter, rusty headers with bullet mufflers, etc. It looks like a time capsule under the hood with Mallory dual point distributor and coil. All the hot rod parts are like new because they have almost no miles on them since they were installed more than 30 miles ago.
The starting has always been intermittent, sometimes it cranks and sometimes it doesn't. When it doesn't, I have been shorting the starter relay with a screwdriver. The starter itself was hit or miss and was getting worse so I finally swapped it out with a known good mini starter 2 days ago on one of the hottest most humid days this year. I set a new personal record for sweating and cussing. The old large style starter was trapped in place with the rusty headers, T-bar and cobbled together steering shaft. There is an actual welded in hunk of 3/4" pipe that replaced the coupling when it was converted to manual steering.
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Ok, new starter so should be good right? Nope. The starter does not operate with the key. I still have to short across the relay. I put a voltmeter on the yellow wire at the relay and it is only showing 5V in the key start position. Zero V in run position. Jumping from 12V battery directly to start terminal spins the starter and it'll fire up.
My main question is why am I only getting 5V at the start terminal on the relay?
This whole car had been nothing but discovering and fixing one bad thing after another.
For the present I just want to make it a reliable cruiser in spite of the lumpy cam, reverse manual valve body, loose converter, rusty headers with bullet mufflers, etc. It looks like a time capsule under the hood with Mallory dual point distributor and coil. All the hot rod parts are like new because they have almost no miles on them since they were installed more than 30 miles ago.
The starting has always been intermittent, sometimes it cranks and sometimes it doesn't. When it doesn't, I have been shorting the starter relay with a screwdriver. The starter itself was hit or miss and was getting worse so I finally swapped it out with a known good mini starter 2 days ago on one of the hottest most humid days this year. I set a new personal record for sweating and cussing. The old large style starter was trapped in place with the rusty headers, T-bar and cobbled together steering shaft. There is an actual welded in hunk of 3/4" pipe that replaced the coupling when it was converted to manual steering.
*****
Ok, new starter so should be good right? Nope. The starter does not operate with the key. I still have to short across the relay. I put a voltmeter on the yellow wire at the relay and it is only showing 5V in the key start position. Zero V in run position. Jumping from 12V battery directly to start terminal spins the starter and it'll fire up.
My main question is why am I only getting 5V at the start terminal on the relay?
This whole car had been nothing but discovering and fixing one bad thing after another.















