Starter No-Load Test

1995 Chevrolet Forward Control 7.4 NSECTION Starter No-Load Test
  1. Connect a tachometer, ammeter and voltmeter into starter circuit. See Fig 1. Using carbon pile, adjust voltage to 10 volts and engage starter motor.
  2. Read amperage draw and armature speed to ensure they are within specification. See STARTER NO-LOAD SPECIFICATIONS  table. If exact voltage cannot be obtained and voltage is slightly higher than specification, RPM should also be slightly higher. Alternatively, carbon pile may be adjusted to reduce voltage.
  3. Low free speed (no load) and high current draw indicates too much friction, shorted armature, or grounded armature or fields. Failure to operate with high current draw indicates a direct ground in terminal or fields, or frozen bearings.
  4. Failure to operate with no current draw indicates an open field, open armature coils, broken brush springs, worn brushes, or high commutator insulation.
  5. If free speed (no load) is low and low current draw exists, suspect high internal resistance due to poor connection, defective leads or dirty commutator. A high free speed and high current draw usually indicates shorted fields.
Fig 1: Testing Starter No-Load
G90G04789Courtesy of GENERAL MOTORS CORP.
STARTER NO-LOAD SPECIFICATIONS

Part No. Series Amps RPM
1113296 28MT 125-190 3000-5600
9000786 PG-260 64-95 2825-3275
10455013 SD-260 50-62 8500-10,700
10455024 SD-250 45-74 8600-12,900
10455050 SD-260 47-70 6500-11,000
10455053 SD-210 52-76 6000-12,900
RENDER: 1.0x

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When to See a Mechanic

Stop DIY work and contact a certified mechanic immediately if any of the following apply:

  • You smell fuel, burning insulation, or see smoke.
  • Brakes feel soft, pull hard to one side, or make grinding noises.
  • The engine overheats, stalls repeatedly, or misfires under load.
  • You are missing required tools, torque specs, or safe lifting equipment.
  • You are not confident in the next step or safety outcome.