Welcome Visitor! Please take a few seconds and Register
for our forum. Even if you don't want to post, you can still 'Like' and react to posts.
I meant the one that goes to the starter, then there's one that goes to the positive battery terminal, and the "s". Can you tell me what the solenoid posts are doing? Can I test this with a voltmeter? The plug that connects onto the "S" pin is reading as a ground or negative?There is no ground post on a starter relay(solenoid)
Can you tell me what the solenoid posts are doing?
Also @Ron, I tried your test and I'm not getting anything with key on or off?
I know enough. Disregard the flywheel. I was misunderstanding something.
It absolutely has to be electrical.. perfect storm, battery unhooked but didn't remove like I should have.. and somehow the engine ground post on my starter solenoid touched the positive battery terminal and so I bought a new solenoid, still no start
Let me clarify, I know enough to assume it's electricalI'm not completely dumb when it comes to engines but I'm also not a Ford master mechanic either lol. Everything was fine before this tho
Yes I was changing the wiring harness to swap to the power windows/locks and my positive battery terminal somehow touched the power out on my solenoid..It had me scared how you jumped from one to the other. I wasn't putting you down either, just want to make sure your level of knowledge. You can lead a horse to water but you cant make it drink kind of thing.
So to be clear, you only changed out the headlights, horn, and plugs on the passenger fender wall. You then connected the PDL and PW wires to the solenoid and got sparks?
Mine does have the "I" pin but it's the same yes. Alright I'll give it a shot! Would a not grounded solenoid cause a no crank situation?Before buying any parts, bolt the solenoid to the fender wall where it goes. Just to be sure it looks similar to this...
![]()
Would a not grounded solenoid cause a no crank situation?
It started with a new battery and the tightened solenoidYes. 12 + volts from ignition switch to the S pin energizes a coil, creating a magnetic field which closes the contacts to connect the large posts together. If the other end of that coil isn't grounded, that won't happen; the circuit can't be completed.
In other words, no ground pisses off the genies that are inside everything electrical, that makes them actually work.