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originally posted by: lordcomac
a reply to: RazorV66
Nice to see someone with starter motor knowledge chiming in! I've replaced my fair share of these, and had a few rebuilt... but even a week doing that for a living would mean knowing far more about it than I ever will.
The problem here is that the starter likely gets overheated every time its used in below freezing weather.
Almost every time, it takes enough crank cycles to mostly drain two 900CCA batteries- it barely managed to start in those temps. Fortunately the charging circuit works well. These perkins engines were built by the english- they were never meant to see real winters.
With 3-d printers being fairly common place these days, its now pretty easy to pick up power tool style connectors- I could pretty easily pick up four of them and screw them to a board, then wire them into the starting circuit. Since the charging circuit runs at 14 volts, 18 isnt *that* far out there...
What I *can* say about the starter:
-it is NOT the higher RPM geared down style. I wanted one of these, but when I tried I got something that didn't fit.
-It says DELCO on it, but when I had it rebuilt the guy said it was a LUCAS
-Note I took at the time says "type m127(2.8)" - is that 2.8KW?
-p/n 3763362m94 (from the book)
its an older style unit, with older values- built to take a beating, but I suspect a newer geared down unit would be a better fit for this climate.
he vehicle I'm talking about is a 70's tractor