We're working on a 350 SBC and the flywheels chewed. The starter has 2 shims on the outboard side to pull it closer to the flywheel and has been working fine. Until now. It's hit this bad spot on the flywheel. We're going to replace the flywheel, but are concerned about the shims. Does look like the starter had too many or not enough?
Put on new flywheel. Mount starter. Pry starter gear into mesh with screw diver. Use a paper clip unbent as a gauge between the teeth. Adjust starter to mesh teeth with gauge inserted. Pop a beer.
Most new starters come with adjustment instructions for shims. Basically you want to disconnect the battery cable and manually engage the Bendix with a pry bar. Check the tooth engagement with a wire guage and check that the Bendix stops before bottoming out against the flywheel. Shim to get the clearance required and it should be quiet and last a long time.
Looks like the gears weren't meshing enough. Also, if you're planning on re-using the starter I'd at least put a new Bendix on it. If the flywheel is that bad, I imagine the starter bendix is not in perfect condition.
Surprisingly, the starter bendix is great. It's a hi-torque mini, don't know if that has anything to do with it, but it appears the flywheel was the weaker of the two. he says he did the paper clip trick when he put it in and I checked and it does look right, but it's kinda dark.
I wish people would call those things "Flex Plates". I was all ready to say "Just get a new ring gear" But that would be on a flywheel. That heavy thing that tends to smooth out the firing pulses.
Well, it does flex a little, so they say. Okay, we added another shim to the outboard side. Now, the flex plate teeth are as far into the bendix as they'll go. I still can't check the distance at the flex plate, but it appears good. Can the teeth be TOO close? We moved the flex plate to the good teeth and it starts fine. He's going to run it like this to get home and replace the flex plate tomorrow.
After measuring the teeth on the bendix and the flex plate, it appears that when the teeth of the flex plate are into the bendix as far as it can, that there is a .035 gap. But, that's a best guess.
I have had to file down the mounting pad on starters before to get a good fit I think that you can use a 1/8 inch rod or allen wrench to put in the bottom of the flex plate tooth and adjust the starter from there.
Now how did I know that before I even opened the thread. The two seem to go hand in hand, "I've got flexplate or flywheel teeth problems" and in the next sentence "It's got a mini starter on it".. That's about 90% of the time so a guy might see some correlation there. Why the need for a mini starter in most cases except for the reason "that all the cool guys have them". No space to put a regular starter is the only viable reason I can come up with.
He has it for header clearance. I've been using a mini for about a year and no problems. In fact, it's the best working starter I've ever had. But that's besides the point. It's what he has and we're trying to solve an issue with clearance. Seems like if the clearance is wrong, it wouldn't matter what kind of starter it is. I've heard of flex plates tearing up starter teeth.
Sorry for not answering to the topic at hand but I'd like to coment about Mini Stater's. I will only use GM metric mini starters, all you need is the correct bolt's (metric shank, SAE thread). Never had any issue's with these unit's.
We did that to check the distance from the bendix to the flex plate. It's right. It's the fit in between the teeth that seems to be the issue. Right now, the flex plate teeth are into the bendix as far as they'll go and there's a gap. I can't get a wire to see how far the bendix teeth are into the flex plate. but by measuring both it's a little less than a 1/16". The length of the flex plate teeth won't let it get any closer into the bendix teeth..
Same here. Like I said, it cured my issues a year ago and has been trouble free. My engine turns over, if I breath on my key. I'm never going back.
if you use a mini starter , they are rated for harder to start high compression engines and use a better heat treated bendix gear to hold up to the extra torque , so when you replace the flexplate look for a SFI one as the teeth on them are ussually harder too . the cheap oem ones are butter soft ( to quiet the gear mesh down ) and the harder bendix gear machines them down as the stock oem starter teeth are not as hard ( ussually sintered steel ) , we learned the hard way on a freinds O/T car with 10:1 compression , 2 Oem flex plates one year , replaced it with a SFi rated one , been 7 years . and when you start it it will be a little louder gear mesh too . but not annoying like a too tight or loose starter . My O/t truck w/BBC has a metric mini from Gm on it and its quiet . we used its type on race cars and had good results and quiet starts too , but with the sfi flex plate the bendix would wear out .
Is it a GM mini that's giving you the problem? It's possible that that flex plate has run out or not run true. Like in egg shaped.
It doesn't seem to be a mini problem. Maybe a combination of both the mini and the flex plate. We bumped the engine, so that the worn teeth were where the bendix teeth are and it starts as it should. It seems like we moved it in far enough, but he's going to replace the flex plate anyway. Can't really tell if it's out of shape.
He says he checked, when he got it and it was the same count. It seems to be working, but we'll still replace the plate tomorrow. Another thing is, I've put 4 (FOUR) shims on the out board side to get it closer. I've never had to use more than 3... ever. We think the block may have been machined at one time.
Maybe that little chines kid with one eye and 7 fingers cardboard template was wore out when he made that one.
If he is going to run it like it is, be sure to leave the cover off, and have a leather glove in the car. I ran a 305 like this for years, until I got tired of climbing under the car every time the engine stopped on the spot missing teeth...which seemed to happen quite a lot. Murphy and his tricks.
Replaced flex plate with a TCI rated at SFI 29.1. Seems to be doing well. he's running without his dust cover to monitor any chewing.
There is a big difference in those than the after market ones with the starter drive hanging out unsupported on the end of a shaft. It might help a lot to put a support strap on the end of the starter to steady it though.