TheOldHokie
Well-known member
Lifetime Member
Equipment
L3901/LA525, B7200DT/B1630, G2160/RCK60, G2460/RCK60
I think his intent is to simply put a pushbutton across the starter solenoid and battery. That switch has to handle the current draw of the solenoid and nothing else.according to the diagram in the WSM, page 384, the 'starter relay'( 4) has a 5 amp fuse, the starter has a 40 amp fuse (6). The starter relay contacts feed the 12v to the starter.
So, if he's replacing the starter relay contacts ,he needs a switch that will carry 40 amps.
If he's bypassing allt eh 'safety stuff' and controlling the starter relay coil, then the switch needs to handle 5 amps (rating of fuse (5) ).
A typical starter solenoid design uses two coils - a pick coil that draws something like 20-25 amps and a hold coil that draws something in the 10 amp range. When initially energized both coils are in the circuit and you get a combined current draw of 30-40 amps for a matter of a few milliseconds. Then the pick coil is effectively shorted out and the hold current settles at around 10A. You can use a relatively light duty pushbutton switch but the solenoid design is hard on the contacts and switch lifetime will be reduced. Thats a pretty common issue in older vehicles where the solenoid was switched directly by contacts in the key switch.
Starter motor inrush current is several hundred amps and steady state cranking current north of 100. The motors are not fused.
Dan