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    Results 1 to 12 of 12
    1. #1
      Join Date
      Jan 2005
      Posts
      80

      when you did your swap did you change the starter?

      I am swapping into a 68 camaro and read somewhere about potential interferance with the starter on an LS1 and some after market company is now making a starte without the 'bullet' nose like the stock starter, any thoughts?

    2. #2
      Join Date
      Jul 2003
      Location
      Anaheim Hills, CA
      Posts
      11,967
      Country Flag: United States
      I used a factory GM starter on my '69 LS1 project with no problem. Most likely depends on the headers you are running.

      I am useing a POWERMASTER LS1 starter on my '68 LS2 project and it appears to be quite a bit smaller.

      Hope this helps.
      "A ship in port is safe, but that's not what ships are built for."

      1968 Track Rat Camaro:
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SGHJ5c1yLIo&t=2s

      1971 Chevelle Wagon with a few mods:
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WBVPR3sRgyU

    3. #3
      Join Date
      Jan 2005
      Posts
      80
      the powermaster is the one that I recall from whatever mag I was reading, most likely will upgrade.

    4. #4
      Join Date
      Jun 2001
      Location
      Orlando, FL
      Posts
      10,603
      Country Flag: United States
      Bringing back from the distant past ...

      Steve: any new thoughts on your Powermaster starter? Jay over at FAST has analyzed my slow start via data logs and sees a significant voltage drop (to 8.9V). It could be the starter, so I'm doing some research on the matter.

      thanks!
      jp
      John Parsons

      UnRivaled Rides -- Modern upgrades for your ride.

      UnRivaled Rides recent project -- LS9-powered 69 Camaro

    5. #5
      Join Date
      Apr 2001
      Location
      The City of Fountains
      Posts
      15,975
      Country Flag: United States
      I am not following how changing the starter would eliminate the voltage drop. Maybe I am misunderstanding something.

      Andrew
      1970 GTO Version 3.0
      1967 Cougar build
      GM High-Tech Performance feature
      My YouTube Channel Please Subscribe!
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      Dr. EFI
      I deliver what EFI promises.
      Remote Holley EFI tuning.
      Please get in touch if I can be of service.

      "You were the gun, your voice was the trigger, your bravery was the barrel, your eyes were the bullets." ~ Her

    6. #6
      Join Date
      Jun 2001
      Location
      Orlando, FL
      Posts
      10,603
      Country Flag: United States
      A bad starter can consume more energy than it was designed for, resulting in more voltage drop. My starter is a junkyard piece, and one that has had considerable use as I tried to get the car to start for weeks!

      I'm going to experiment this afternoon by starting the car with a battery charger charging the battery to see if the voltage drop is reduced, and if the car starts more quickly. Jay (at FAST) showed me in the log where the ECU reset due to low voltage, which took about 3s to do causing the bulk of the delay in starting.

      I'd love to know what others see for voltage as the engine is cranked before starting. I figured that a significant voltage drop during starting was normal... but perhaps not?

      jp
      John Parsons

      UnRivaled Rides -- Modern upgrades for your ride.

      UnRivaled Rides recent project -- LS9-powered 69 Camaro

    7. #7
      Join Date
      Jul 2001
      Location
      Detroit, Michigan
      Posts
      6,854
      Country Flag: United States
      I have a '68 Camaro that I just swapped an LS1 into and I'm using the stock starter. There are absolutely no clearance issues whatsoever.
      1968 Pro-Touring Camaro LS1

      Project: Next Year
      - Start date; June '01
      - Completion; Sometime next year or the year after.....

    8. #8
      Join Date
      Jul 2003
      Location
      Anaheim Hills, CA
      Posts
      11,967
      Country Flag: United States
      I orginally was going to run the Powermaster starter, but the first ones they made were NOT clockable and in turn hit the headers.

      So, I'm running a stock starter without any issues whatsoever.

      The new Powermaster units are clockable, so they should fit fine. They did seem to be better made, but then again my OEM one has worked fine

      I haven't checked the voltage during cranking.. I will see if I can get that done
      "A ship in port is safe, but that's not what ships are built for."

      1968 Track Rat Camaro:
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SGHJ5c1yLIo&t=2s

      1971 Chevelle Wagon with a few mods:
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WBVPR3sRgyU

    9. #9
      Join Date
      Jun 2001
      Location
      Orlando, FL
      Posts
      10,603
      Country Flag: United States
      Quote Originally Posted by SteveR
      I haven't checked the voltage during cranking.. I will see if I can get that done
      Cool! Thanks very much!

      jp
      John Parsons

      UnRivaled Rides -- Modern upgrades for your ride.

      UnRivaled Rides recent project -- LS9-powered 69 Camaro

    10. #10
      Join Date
      Aug 2004
      Location
      San Bernardino, CA
      Posts
      883
      stock rebuild off ebay. once its installed tons of room. its kind of a pain to get in there with hooker headers installed but it is possible.

    11. #11
      Are you running FAST XFI with the XIM ignition box? If so, the XIM boxes have had problems. I have two of them. For no reason whatsoever, the car becomes very hard to start. It will go so far as to blow stock starters off of the block. It has done it on both of our XFI-equipped cars. I thought it might be worth mentioning.

      Trevor
      Texas Speed & Performance

      Quote Originally Posted by parsonsj
      A bad starter can consume more energy than it was designed for, resulting in more voltage drop. My starter is a junkyard piece, and one that has had considerable use as I tried to get the car to start for weeks!

      I'm going to experiment this afternoon by starting the car with a battery charger charging the battery to see if the voltage drop is reduced, and if the car starts more quickly. Jay (at FAST) showed me in the log where the ECU reset due to low voltage, which took about 3s to do causing the bulk of the delay in starting.

      I'd love to know what others see for voltage as the engine is cranked before starting. I figured that a significant voltage drop during starting was normal... but perhaps not?

      jp

    12. #12
      Join Date
      Jun 2001
      Location
      Orlando, FL
      Posts
      10,603
      Country Flag: United States
      Are you running FAST XFI with the XIM ignition box?
      No... I'm old school. I'm using the XFI with an eDIST and Crank Decoder.

      jp

      John Parsons

      UnRivaled Rides -- Modern upgrades for your ride.

      UnRivaled Rides recent project -- LS9-powered 69 Camaro






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