under the dash. I have replaced my batteries with two new ones. The GP card is new from Antenna Climber.
I have been driving it for months since I cleaned the GP card contacts with sandpaper and inserted the new GP card. But today, out-of-the-blue, I turned the key, the WAIT light came on for 6-7 seconds as usual. I turned the key and get gauge lights and a soft snap (the gp relay?) then the loud snap of the starter relay behind the dash. I found that if I hold the key in the START position a millisecond too long that I also get this kind of Ned Beatty squeal?
Just removed all the battery cables and cleaned them. The Batts tested at 12.55 each, so I expect that this is enough juice to crank the starter. Pulled the red wire from the rear battery to the junction block near the GP relay. It has a good connection. The pink and green leads on the IP also got a scrub down.
The Doghead relay was swapped-in 6 months ago and seemed fine all this time with the exception of an occasional no crank, followed by a crank and start immediately after. I see this condition asked about frequently on this forum; but have yet to see a definitive cause listed. Since the ignition circuit seems to be the only circuit involved, why is the culprit so illusive? I have replaced batteries, GP card, starter relays, and invested a lot of time in this same problem last time it happened. It mysteriously disappeared after installing the new GP card last time; but I don't think that was the true problem.
Has anyone here truly narrowed the problem down to a failed component, or cause ever?
I have been driving it for months since I cleaned the GP card contacts with sandpaper and inserted the new GP card. But today, out-of-the-blue, I turned the key, the WAIT light came on for 6-7 seconds as usual. I turned the key and get gauge lights and a soft snap (the gp relay?) then the loud snap of the starter relay behind the dash. I found that if I hold the key in the START position a millisecond too long that I also get this kind of Ned Beatty squeal?
Just removed all the battery cables and cleaned them. The Batts tested at 12.55 each, so I expect that this is enough juice to crank the starter. Pulled the red wire from the rear battery to the junction block near the GP relay. It has a good connection. The pink and green leads on the IP also got a scrub down.
The Doghead relay was swapped-in 6 months ago and seemed fine all this time with the exception of an occasional no crank, followed by a crank and start immediately after. I see this condition asked about frequently on this forum; but have yet to see a definitive cause listed. Since the ignition circuit seems to be the only circuit involved, why is the culprit so illusive? I have replaced batteries, GP card, starter relays, and invested a lot of time in this same problem last time it happened. It mysteriously disappeared after installing the new GP card last time; but I don't think that was the true problem.
Has anyone here truly narrowed the problem down to a failed component, or cause ever?