300/440/550 Starter died, AGAIN!

ger87410

How did I get here?
Location
Fort Worth
1987 js550. Stock carb.
This is the 3rd time that the starter has died on me within a year.
1st time was at Caballo ~ March.
2nd time was at Texoma ~ June.
3rd time was at Elephant Butte this past weekend.

Only thing that I can think of is I'm having to crank her too much and it's wearing down the starter. :shrug: I crank it for about 10 seconds before she starts kicking over on her own when I start her.

Any ideas what could be causing starters to hate me so much?
 
Last edited:

ger87410

How did I get here?
Location
Fort Worth
I'm replacing the starters with new starters that come with a warranty.
The last starter had a 2 year warranty attached.

I don't think the starter brushes are getting wet because it's a Goki looking starter that's sealed. There was no water under the flywheel cover.
 
fix your hard starting issue first by rebuilding your carb or whatever ails your boat.your crank seals may be going bad as well..js always started easily if tuned right and in good machanical condition.
goki starters are iffy at best.
oem is the only way to go but pricey.
 

WFO Speedracer

A lifetime ban is like a lifetime warranty !
Location
Alabama
550'S were always hard starters but yes it sounds like he has carb problems to boot,maybe a new needle and seat-carb rebuild is in order.
 

3wheelerdude

Talk less, Ride more!
Location
Ontario Canada
Even if he has a hard start issue, starters I have used in watercraft or offroad or any other type of application seem to last much longer. Even in Honda 3wheelers that need to be cranked for more than 30 seconds to start, they still last years before they need rebuild.

I think its related to an electrical or water infiltration issue.
 

ger87410

How did I get here?
Location
Fort Worth
Starters that I've used in cars, motorcycles, and Kim's PWC have all lasted several times longer.
Kim's is still the original starter I got with the ski and I'm 100% sure it's got more cranking time on it then any starter I've had in my 550. I'd wager her starter has more cranking hours on it then all of the starters I've gone through combined.

1 of the starters I went through was OEM. It had the same problem.

I'm 99% sure it's not water infiltration. I'm not sure what to look for in the electrical system. Only thing I can think of to do is trace the wiring path to the starter and make sure the wires look good, without frays or cracks...
 

Mouthfulloflake

ISJWTA member #2
Location
NW Arkansas
look for corroded connections, anywhere between the largre battery cables, grounds and starter.

just go ahead and clean them all, including the ones on the starter relay.
 

ger87410

How did I get here?
Location
Fort Worth
It's not water infiltration. My mechanic verified that.

It's not over-use. We hardly used it in the 4 trips to the lake THIS starter.

The connections are clean. 1 going from the battery to the relay, 1 going from the relay to the starter, 1 going from the battery to the engine block, and 1 going from the block to the electronics. All clean.

Any other ideas?
Defective starters?
Both starters died and when you connect them straight to a battery it doesn't even spark. That tells me the starter's windings are shot. It'd take a great amount of heat to break the winging. More then can be generated by the sun, I think.
 
My old 550 used to eat starters too, though it turns out it had a bad front crank seal. You can tell because there was oily crud on the front (and inside) of the starter because the starter was seeing crancase pressure!).

Also, you should NEVER crank the starter when the starter starts to get hot and crank slow, or the battery is low. That will cook a starter.

My suggestion:
#1: Make sure your front crank seal is ok
#2: When you get a new starter, get a new battery and use beefy cables


It's not water infiltration. My mechanic verified that.
It's not over-use. We hardly used it in the 4 trips to the lake THIS starter.
The connections are clean. 1 going from the battery to the relay, 1 going from the relay to the starter, 1 going from the battery to the engine block, and 1 going from the block to the electronics. All clean.
Any other ideas?
Defective starters?
Both starters died and when you connect them straight to a battery it doesn't even spark. That tells me the starter's windings are shot. It'd take a great amount of heat to break the winging. More then can be generated by the sun, I think.
 

ger87410

How did I get here?
Location
Fort Worth
Thanx for sharing your thoughts!
Also, you should NEVER crank the starter when the starter starts to get hot and crank slow, or the battery is low. That will cook a starter.
The last time it cranked slow was after sitting untouched for a week. The weekend before she cranked like a champ the whole day.
My suggestion:
#1: Make sure your front crank seal is ok
#2: When you get a new starter, get a new battery and use beefy cables
Crank seal is OK. My mechanic verified that last time the starter went.

It's a new battery. Got her just this year and charge her up every week before riding.

Here's a pick of the cables. Dunno what gauge they are, or if I can get any beefier cables.

Also here's a pick of the starter. I haven't cleaned it, and don't think I will before shipping it back.

I already threw my backup starter in and she cranked like you wouldn't believe and started in about 1/4 second.
 

Attachments

  • IMAGE_007.jpg
    IMAGE_007.jpg
    51.5 KB · Views: 24
  • IMAGE_008.jpg
    IMAGE_008.jpg
    57.9 KB · Views: 29
Top Bottom