Hey Guys ....
I have an old (22 years old) boat, that my buddy and I have been trying to get up and running good over the past couple of months .... We even went as far as replacing a head gasket ourselves !!!! WOOT ; If you are a boat enthusiast ... my buddy also just picked up a 1972 Chrysler -- LOL -- for $400 bucks. We enjoy trying to restore ... sometimes we are successful, sometimes not, but we do try
Boat:
351w (Ford 351) cabeurated
After the head gasket replacement ... She purred like a kitten up until this last weekend when we tried to take her out.
Ran Great for 15-20 minutes, all of a sudden, starter started to engage .... Would still run, you just hear the chomping at the bit of the starter in the background. (mind you, starter is quite new)
Pulled the starter wire from the solenoid, and starter stopped ... Thankfully. Figured it was the solenoid acting up .... Got the boat back to the dock, picked up a new solenoid, slapped her on, took her out the next day.
Same thing happened ... Except this time, ignition switch off wouldn't kill the engine. We pulled the battery negative terminal, still going (nice to know the alternator is doing its job), pulled the starter solenoid connection ... still going ... pulled the ignition cable off solenoid = engine stopped.
So ... I figured, the likely culprit was the ignition itself .... Wrong. Replaced that this evening ... Hook everything back up to the solenoid, go to put the negative terminal back on the battery, and she tries to fire up


So, my question
1. What would cause the engine to crank and try and fire by me simply trying to connect the battery back up (mind you, ignition is off)
Sorry for the long post guys .... This boat is killing me.
CLIFF NOTES:
* Replaced Ignition
* Replaced Solenoid
* Starter is only about a year old
* With ignition off and battery disconnected, as soon as you try to hook back up, she tries to fire.
I have an old (22 years old) boat, that my buddy and I have been trying to get up and running good over the past couple of months .... We even went as far as replacing a head gasket ourselves !!!! WOOT ; If you are a boat enthusiast ... my buddy also just picked up a 1972 Chrysler -- LOL -- for $400 bucks. We enjoy trying to restore ... sometimes we are successful, sometimes not, but we do try
Boat:
351w (Ford 351) cabeurated
After the head gasket replacement ... She purred like a kitten up until this last weekend when we tried to take her out.
Ran Great for 15-20 minutes, all of a sudden, starter started to engage .... Would still run, you just hear the chomping at the bit of the starter in the background. (mind you, starter is quite new)
Pulled the starter wire from the solenoid, and starter stopped ... Thankfully. Figured it was the solenoid acting up .... Got the boat back to the dock, picked up a new solenoid, slapped her on, took her out the next day.
Same thing happened ... Except this time, ignition switch off wouldn't kill the engine. We pulled the battery negative terminal, still going (nice to know the alternator is doing its job), pulled the starter solenoid connection ... still going ... pulled the ignition cable off solenoid = engine stopped.
So ... I figured, the likely culprit was the ignition itself .... Wrong. Replaced that this evening ... Hook everything back up to the solenoid, go to put the negative terminal back on the battery, and she tries to fire up
So, my question
1. What would cause the engine to crank and try and fire by me simply trying to connect the battery back up (mind you, ignition is off)
Sorry for the long post guys .... This boat is killing me.
CLIFF NOTES:
* Replaced Ignition
* Replaced Solenoid
* Starter is only about a year old
* With ignition off and battery disconnected, as soon as you try to hook back up, she tries to fire.