Starter motor OEM Honda or OEM FORD

OEM Honda Starter motor

Recently had this happen on my 2006 CRV. Started as a slowing crank, then it slow cranked and just stopped. Jump wouldn’t help, but I could bump start it. Turned out to be the starter.

Pros: could bump start it
Cons: slowing crank, just stopped
Vehicle: Honda
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OEM Honda Starter motor

The OEM unit will outperform all the junk that people buy that's non oem. That starter lasted 20 years. It's a great product. You will likely have moved on from the car for some other problem by the time it dies again. The other non oem stuff "works" but longevity and crank time would probably been different.

Pros: outperforms non-OEM, lasted 20 years, great product
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OEM Honda Starter motor
FFJosty
  • Cranking:
  • Sounds:
Rating 5.0

On the newest updated OEM starter for the 9th gen, that washer is almost 3x thicker than the previous models. This allows for more secure tooth engagement. That and the TSB fixed mine... Mine has been grind-free for over two years...

Pros: secure tooth engagement, grind-free operation
Vehicle: Honda Civic
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OEM FORD Starter motor

I was having the intermittent no start on my 2018 5.0 F150. I’m at roughly 42K miles. Swapped battery, still had the issue. Swapped starter, now starting and remote start back to normal. I feel like a starter should last more than 40K.

Pros: starting back to normal
Cons: starter lasted 40K miles
Vehicle: Ford
Mileage: 67592 km
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OEM FORD Starter motor

Bro I had to pull a starter off an old F-250 for a friend. Only way to get anything on the top bolt was with 3 and a half feet of extensions from behind the cab.

Cons: hard to reach top bolt
Vehicle: Ford
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