To check voltage drop, you take the positive (red) lead of a volt meter, and put it on center of the positive terminal of the battery, and put the negitive (black) lead on the top terminal of the starter solenoid, with the red cable on it. Before the starter is energized, the voltage should be 0 volts. The voltmeter is just connected to the two ends of the same wire that goes from the battery, under the floor, past the motor, and up to the "not really the starter relay" , and back down to the starter. When the starter is engaged, a lot of current (amps) flow through this cable, and it has to have a good connection. If there is a poor connection, there will be a large voltage drop in this wire, the starter will not get the voltage it wants, and won't work. The same conditions apply to the ground wire back to the battery.
To turn the motor by hand, you need a 15/16, 1/2 square drive socket, and a breaker bar. A breaker bar is a bar about 18 inches long, and has a 1/2 inch square that fits the socket. The socket should fit on the nut in the center of the bottom pully. on the front of your engine. Looking to the back of the motor, turn the motor clockwise with the breaker bar. It should turn with moderate hard difficulty, but it should turn. MAKE SURE THE KEY IS OFF AND OUT OF THE IGNITION, OR BETTER YET THE BATTERY IS DISCONNECTED WHEN DOING THIS! I am sorry if this sounds too basic, but you said you are new at mechanical things.
To turn the motor by hand, you need a 15/16, 1/2 square drive socket, and a breaker bar. A breaker bar is a bar about 18 inches long, and has a 1/2 inch square that fits the socket. The socket should fit on the nut in the center of the bottom pully. on the front of your engine. Looking to the back of the motor, turn the motor clockwise with the breaker bar. It should turn with moderate hard difficulty, but it should turn. MAKE SURE THE KEY IS OFF AND OUT OF THE IGNITION, OR BETTER YET THE BATTERY IS DISCONNECTED WHEN DOING THIS! I am sorry if this sounds too basic, but you said you are new at mechanical things.
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