beaux312
Full Member
Haven’t been on here in a while. I need help bypassing the old starter solenoid. I swapped to the explorer starter and need help deleting the old one.
Haven’t been on here in a while. I need help bypassing the old starter solenoid. I swapped to the explorer starter and need help deleting the old one.
There is no hair. Ford designed the vehicle, and its parts; and Ford calls it the "starter relay" because of what it does - not because of how it's built. Like all relays, it relays a low-current signal (from the ig.sw. in this case) to a high-current device (the starter motor). It wouldn't matter if it did that using a solenoid to throw the switch, or a solid-state relay, or a monkey flipping a toggle - it would still be a relay; not a monkey. Your Bronco has several connecting rods inside it, but you don't call the whole Bronco a connecting rod, do you? The one ON the starter is called the "starter solenoid" because its primary function is to convert electric current into straight-line mechanical force (to shove the Bendix into the ring gear), which is what all solenoids do. Yes, after that's done, it also closes a switch to power the motor, but that's a secondary function.As long as we are splitting hairs...
There is no hair. Ford designed the vehicle, and its parts; and Ford calls it the "starter relay" because of what it does - not because of how it's built. Like all relays, it relays a low-current signal (from the ig.sw. in this case) to a high-current device (the starter motor). It wouldn't matter if it did that using a solenoid to throw the switch, or a solid-state relay, or a monkey flipping a toggle - it would still be a relay; not a monkey. Your Bronco has several connecting rods inside it, but you don't call the whole Bronco a connecting rod, do you? The one ON the starter is called the "starter solenoid" because its primary function is to convert electric current into straight-line mechanical force (to shove the Bendix into the ring gear), which is what all solenoids do. Yes, after that's done, it also closes a switch to power the motor, but that's a secondary function.
Of course, you're free to call a tail a leg if you want. But as the man said: that doesn't MAKE IT a solenoid.![]()