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đ ď¸ Sea-Doo Speedster Starter Motor Troubleshooting: Why My New Starter Didn’t Work
Things were heading in a good direction! But thenânew day, new curve ball. I took the boat down to the water for testing, excited to see both engines roar to life. But the starboard engine wouldnât crank at all.
So it was back on the trailer, back home, and time to investigate.
If youâve ever replaced a starter motor on a Sea-Doo Speedster only to find the engine still wonât crank properly, you’re not alone. I recently went through a frustrating starter replacement saga that ended up being a valuable lesson in diagnosing electrical issues on boats with Rotax 787 engines. Hereâs what happened â and how I finally fixed it.
đ§ Symptom: No Crank or Very Slow Crank After Starter Replacement
I ordered a replacement starter motor for my Sea-Doo Speedster, installed it, and… nothing. Or rather, it cranked slowlyâbarely moving the engine. My first thought? Electrical issue. So I checked the basics:
- Fully charged battery â
- Clean terminals and tight connections â
- Voltage at the starter terminal â
Still, the same problem: no proper crank.
⥠Voltage Drop During Start
I performed a voltage drop test while cranking, and yep â there was a noticeable drop. But it wasnât due to poor wiring. The starter itself was pulling serious amps, even though it wasn’t turning the engine over properly. That told me something was off internally with the starter.
đ Tried Another Amazon Starter â Still No Luck
To rule out a bad part, I ordered a brand new starter motor from Amazon and installed it. Same issue. Slow crank. No start. At this point I was second-guessing everythingâwas it a bad ground? Seized engine? Faulty solenoid?
Nope.
đ The Known-Good Starter Test
I decided to pull the known working starter motor from the other engine and install it in the same position. Result? Instant, strong crank. No hesitation. No voltage drop beyond normal under-load conditions.
That confirmed it: both new starters were junk.
â The Fix: Donât Trust Every New Part
The issue wasnât with the battery, wiring, or groundingâit was the starters themselves. Despite being brand new, they couldnât handle load. Whether they were poorly built or defective from the factory, itâs a reminder that ânewâ doesnât always mean âgood.â
đ§ Key Takeaways for Sea-Doo Owners:
- Always perform a voltage drop test when diagnosing starter issues.
- If youâre seeing a high amp draw and no crank, the starter might be the problemânot the wiring.
- Consider swapping in a known good starter to verify the issue before chasing phantom faults.
- Be cautious when buying aftermarket or budget starter motors onlineâperformance can vary widely.
đ Common Searches This Might Help:
- Sea-Doo Speedster no start after new starter
- Rotax 787 starter motor replacement problems
- How to test a bad starter on a jet boat
- Amazon starter not working Sea-Doo
- Voltage drop when starting Sea-Doo engine
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