its the starter.. mine did this as well.. night and day comparison with a rebuilt starter.
Quote from: "jtanguay"its the starter.. mine did this as well.. night and day comparison with a rebuilt starter.Turns out that you were right. I was at a local rebuilding shop and bought a solenoid for $20. Took the starter off and inside to work on it. After a bugger of a time getting the rotted phillips screws out of the old one, I got the new one in and back onto the car. Unfortionatly, it still does EXACTLY the same thing. It cranks one or 2 turns, then it freewheels.I talked to a local VW guru, who told me its more likely to be the starter "drive". Should I attempt to undertake this myself? A rebuilt complete unit from NAPA is like $250, which is a heap of money (to me, anways). Plus, I already have the new solenoid on there. I tried the used starter method, but couldnt find any diesel starters at the wreckers.
I talked to a local VW guru, who told me its more likely to be the starter "drive".
I believe the part you're looking for is the bindix drive. It's basically a one-way clutch that has gone bad. Good luck!
Yep, just had the same thing happen on one of mine. ziiiinnnnggg The rebuilder says the clutch was probably bad.
QuoteOne little tip, when you put the new one on do not lube the splines on the shaft! When the grease thickens in the cold, the drive gear won't be able to slide out fast enough and it'll hit the flywheel spinning and break the teeth off.i thought the motor will not engage if the solenoid isn't fully extended, to eliminate this from happening?
One little tip, when you put the new one on do not lube the splines on the shaft! When the grease thickens in the cold, the drive gear won't be able to slide out fast enough and it'll hit the flywheel spinning and break the teeth off.
i thought the motor will not engage if the solenoid isn't fully extended, to eliminate this from happening?