
If I count correctly this will be the 14th time I've installed a 6.2 starter. 



If I count correctly this will be the 14th time I've installed a 6.2 starter.


So I believe mine is done too.Starter #14 is a dud. Drive gear is too tightly meshed with the flywheel. If I understand correctly, 27MT starters on early 6.2 engines were sometimes shimmed (but never more than 0.060"). But fairly quickly GM declared this a non-shimmable engine, and the 28MT gear reduction starters were never shimmed. It makes sense, these motors have a 3kW power rating (compare that to 2.2kW for a Dmax or 1.4kW for an 8.1 engine). And the vertical mounting bolts are not the sturdiest mounting solution. This pig sees a lot of torque, and it needs to be tight to the block. And, despite having a machined mounting surface, it's not machined correctly. Sigh.
So...I called up Oreilly Auto and I'm going to swap this "new" Chinese knockoff unit for another "new" Chinese knockoff unit. Which would be starter installation #15. Not counting that this one was installed twice thanks to the bracket stud snapping.
I'm still taking recommendations if anyone still makes quality starters for these unloved boat anchor engines.![]()
So I believe mine is done too.
What is yours doing?
Mine is just turning over slow no matter how many batteries jump starting same slow speed, like one or 2 windings are done
Replaced the ring gear and got a starter from GM.
All happy now.

The cheaper starters cost more than anything saved.

It also is doing that, grinding and skipping sometimes.It has the high-pitched metallic whine/grinding sound of teeth binding. I started the engine half a dozen times, and it consistently whined. Three times the solenoid stuck closed after the engine started (so the starter was spinning at engine speed). This would have meant pulling off the battery cable if I didn't have my handy remote solenoid to cut the power. And one time the solenoid stuck open and it freewheeled like the old starter did. Tonight I noticed new scrapes on some of the flywheel teeth.
Can it be shimmed? Probably. But I have no guarantee that would work, and it's not the recommended practice. So I will do yet another warranty exchange.
I would have done that years ago if I had confidence I could get a high-quality new starter. Even the new AC Delco units (P/N 3371002) are Chinese knockoffs now.![]()
I've donated hundreds of dollars of my labor to these cheapie starter motors. And now I also have scratching on my flywheel teeth. Imagine if I had let that starter go for a few months, until teeth started breaking off...![]()

It also is doing that, grinding and skipping sometimes.
So I guess I should have called it right then. Instead I spent days charging the batteries and putting the charger on as well to help.
I should have known since it was starting smooth for a long time and suddenly started grinding and skipping.
And mine is the gear reduction 28mt
I did look at it and it was tight no idea if it shifted though.If a good starter abruptly started grinding, I'd look for a loose brace. The brace is what restrains the motor from tilting back and forth. Perhaps yours has shifted?
I did look at it and it was tight no idea if it shifted though.
I have another starter that came with the other engine I will give it a try
Yeah I made a different cable and routed it different.My extra 3" exhaust pipe eats up the space the battery cable normally occupies, so the cable sits in front of the brace. The 13mm block bolt is downright annoying to access right now.
I'd think you have a similar problem since you have the same ATS turbo manifold...
So do you have a front/rear seat? I have a set from a Tahoe that aren't in bad shape. You can have them if you want them.This week we're starting the interior build. I'm refining my ideas for a rear platform (with separate electrical system) and I've started working on the cockpit. The front bench seat is gone, so I won't need to sit on its wretched steel frame anymore. I have test fitted my spare set of bucket seats. I forgot that both of the inboard seat mounts require an extra bracket to level the seats out, so each seat can only be bolted into the two outboard holes (unless you like sitting off-camber). I'm determined to keep my middle seatbelt, so I will be looking for a compatible middle seat (or a full set). But the temporary seats are lots more comfy than sitting on the steel seat frame!
I have a bunch of nickle-and-dime things to finish up. Like installing the sway bar and the rear G80.
But next up should be putting gauges into the gauge cluster. Because boost!
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