I don't know what I did, but somehow I killed my Spider. And I've only had it for 48 hours!
This morning I went out to look at the radiator fan; I don't think it's working. First thing I did was start it up and pull it out of the garage, and then I drove it around the block to get it warmed up. Then I came back to my driveway and turned it off. I started it back up again, no problems, and watched for the radiator fan to turn on, which it did not do.
I noticed that the ground wire connected was not connected for the fan, so I went into the trunk and unplugged the negative battery cable. I plugged the ground wire in. Then I went back and reattached the negative battery cable. There was a little spark when I reattached the negative batter cable. I turned the key until I got the power going, and then I tried to start it.
Nothing. There was a short sound like the starter tried to work but immediately killed. I turned the key off, and this time when I turned it back on I got no power, and obviously the engine did not crank.
I went into the trunk and assumed that I had not attached the negative battery cable properly. It was pretty old so I replaced cable with a new one. I made sure both the positive and negative cables were tightly attached to the battery. The battery is brand new.
Again, I would get power when I turned the key, but when I tried to start the engine it would immediately kill, and then I would get no power at all.
If I wiggle the positive battery cable and then turn the key, I get power and I hear a ticking sound (this must be the alternator?). The headlights and turn signals work fine. But whenever I turn the key it kills immediately.
I tried to jump start the battery twice, and this did not help.
I am at a loss as to what happened. I didn't do anything except unplug the negative battery cable and then re-attach it.
Could this be a bad cable? Bad starter? Why would it stop working so suddenly?
Strange starting problem
Well, I figured it out.
When I said "wiggle the cable", I ment that I would slightly bend the cable; it is firmly attached to the battery terminal.
So! I just went back out to the garage and took a hard look at the main cable. I held the cable between my thumb and index finger and pulled slightly . The cable sheered away from the clamp! This thing must have been losing voltage, but it was only when I moved the battery this last time (to unplug the negative cable) that the positive cable cracked and dropped power.
I have to replace the entire cable. I've never done this before. Any help?
When I said "wiggle the cable", I ment that I would slightly bend the cable; it is firmly attached to the battery terminal.
So! I just went back out to the garage and took a hard look at the main cable. I held the cable between my thumb and index finger and pulled slightly . The cable sheered away from the clamp! This thing must have been losing voltage, but it was only when I moved the battery this last time (to unplug the negative cable) that the positive cable cracked and dropped power.
I have to replace the entire cable. I've never done this before. Any help?
After I posted the original message, I went out and re-attached the clamp to the cable. It looks like the previous owner had himself patched the clamp, because the cable end wasn't cut cleanly and was fastened poorly. I cut the cable end, stripped it, and screwed it on very tight. As good as new, and it started right up! My son and I went for a drive this evening, and it was wonderful.
Thanks for the help.
Thanks for the help.