after charging my dead battery on my 95 f150,the truck started on its own

Asked by GuruTC5FF Jun 26, 2018 at 03:28 PM about the 1995 Ford F-150 XLT 4WD Extended Cab SB

Question type: Maintenance & Repair

my battery was dead ,put a charger on it,  put the charger on 50 amp start mode ,before I made it to the cab, the truck started on its own, no key in,bendix stayed engaged, had to disconnect the starter relay to shut it down. So far I have replaced the starter relay, ignition switch and starter and starter solenoid,... any suggestions???

2 Answers

73,310

Did you reverse the polarity on the charger connections to the battery? + to - instead of + to +?

140

Haha I have had this happen with my trooper...replace your negative and positive wires they are cheap but first measure them so you know the length to get. I went through 4 starters and 3 alternators in 1 year. Stupid me didnt think electrical after all that. Anyways your batter is getting a spark from wires exposed due to cracked sleeves, being old, or even say you had replaced a part and hit the wires sometimes you can pull that sleeve off and expose it. But .one was from having to replace those parts so much the wires had crumbled and I never saw them due to the tube they are in. Well that area does get hot and I should have looked at the wires after the second replacement. I hope this helps it did for me

Your Answer:

CarGurus Experts

  • #1
    OJ
    Reputation
    41,830
  • #2
    Gene Arnett
    Reputation
    15,990
  • #3
    Rowefast
    Reputation
    15,470
View All

Find great deals from top-rated dealers

Search

Related Models For Sale

Used GMC Sierra 1500
154 Great Deals out of 8,348 listings starting at $5,975
Used Toyota Tacoma
31 Great Deals out of 724 listings starting at $9,975
Used Dodge RAM 1500
95 listings starting at $9,594
Used Ford F-250
7 listings
Used Ford Mustang
57 Great Deals out of 1,668 listings starting at $5,977
Used Ford Ranger
16 Great Deals out of 639 listings starting at $8,999
Used Toyota 4Runner
25 Great Deals out of 528 listings starting at $7,990
Used Jeep Wrangler
132 Great Deals out of 5,983 listings starting at $8,990
Used Ford Explorer
70 Great Deals out of 2,022 listings starting at $3,333

Content submitted by Users is not endorsed by CarGurus, does not express the opinions of CarGurus, and should not be considered reviewed, screened, or approved by CarGurus. Please refer to CarGurus Terms of Use. Content will be removed if CarGurus becomes aware that it violates our policies.