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The Toyota dealer put in a new battery , 2004 Sienna, I don't know the history. Since the new battery, the car will not crank, no solenoid click, headlights and all accessories work fine. When jumped, it starts immediately, you hardly hear the starter. I have loosened and re-tightened the battery connectors and secondary cables at the terminals, everything looks good. We will be going back to the dealer soon but I would like to hear some ideas , in case he tries to sell a new starter, etc. New info --- After several jump starts , now it won't jump start - no solenoid sound. I suspect the battery has nothing to do with it. Ignition switch ? Transmission interlock switch?

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  • Why was the last battery replaced? Was it for these same symptoms? It is possible a new battery can be defective. If they try to sell you something else, they did a poor job of troubleshooting in the first place.
    – CharlieRB
    Aug 31, 2017 at 17:44
  • I understand the dealer said the old battery was "weak" Aug 31, 2017 at 18:06

2 Answers 2

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For a small fortune ,the dealer said it was the starter. Because the starter turned just fine when it turned, I believe he meant the solenoid. And the facts of life are a dealer is going to replace the starter not just the solenoid. I guess the days are gone when I cleaned up the solenoid contactor for free and drove another 100 K ; maybe spent a few dollars on starter brushes.

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Firstly check the battery connections are nice and tight with no corrosion on the terminals or wires.
Look at the connections on the starter itself and make sure they are nice and tight with no corrosion.
Seen as you hear no clicking I would assume it's the starter solenoid that is at fault.
Hope this helps.

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  • Certainly a suspect , although jumping did start it until now. Aug 31, 2017 at 18:12
  • Did you jump it across the solenoid terminals? Try putting a circuit tester light in the circuit to see if it's recieving any power . If it's not and the battery is reading good with a multimeter then the problem may be further upstream such as a saftey switch somewhere. A wiring diagram may be of use.
    – DamoC
    Aug 31, 2017 at 19:13
  • Test battery with multimeter. then disconnect black terminal and test with multimeter between black cable and negative terminal. You should see a voltage drop of 5 or less. This will confirm that your battery and wiring are good. if it fails, you know there is a problem in the ground. Also, jiggle the cables. that fixed my car. The inside of my negative has a connection issue where certain angles separate the connection.
    – Drew Major
    Aug 31, 2017 at 19:50

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