TorqueMech Beta
TorqueMech Symptom Guide

No Crank

Mechanic-first diagnostic path for no-crank complaints before replacing the starter or battery.

Start with the complaint Confirm with checks Estimate when narrowed

A no-crank complaint should be split into battery capacity, cable voltage drop, starter command, and starter motor behavior before parts are priced.

Continue the repair flow Checks, vehicle, and service context stay together. Continue Estimate

Common Sounds or Signs

  • Single click when the key or start button is pressed
  • Rapid clicking from low voltage
  • No sound from the starter relay or starter
  • Intermittent crank after sitting, heat soak, or cable movement

Quick Checks

  • Load test the battery before condemning the starter
  • Check voltage drop on positive and ground cable paths
  • Verify starter relay, fuse, and crank command signal
  • Inspect battery terminals, grounds, and starter connections

Inspection Priority

  • Verify battery voltage and load-test results first
  • Inspect starter circuit command before replacement
  • Confirm charging system health when the battery repeatedly tests low
Inspection recommended before replacement Further diagnostics may be required for intermittent faults Common repair when power, ground, and command checks agree

Common Causes

  • Weak battery
  • High-resistance battery cable or ground
  • Starter motor or solenoid failure
  • Starter relay, fuse, neutral safety, clutch switch, or command issue

Likely Diagnostic Paths

  • If voltage falls low during crank request, battery and cable checks come before starter replacement.
  • If battery voltage stays strong but the starter does not respond, inspect command signal, relay, fuse, and starter connections.
  • If the starter clicks or works intermittently with heat, starter and cable voltage-drop checks move higher.

Diagnostic Path

Pick the first inspection path.

Battery and Cable Path

Prove the vehicle has enough power and ground before pricing a starter.

  • Load test battery state of health
  • Voltage-drop positive and ground cables
  • Inspect terminals and ground straps
Battery evidence first Cable drop can mimic starter failure

Starter Circuit Path

When power is available, confirm the starter receives the correct command before replacing it.

  • Check starter relay and fuse operation
  • Verify crank signal at the starter solenoid when accessible
  • Check immobilizer or neutral safety clues when command is missing
Confirm command before replacement Access varies by engine

Related OBD Codes

Use scan data to narrow the system.

  • P0562 - System voltage low

Common Next Steps

Quick checks before expanding the estimate.

Test charging voltage

Measure alternator output and battery voltage under load.

Inspect serpentine belt

Check belt condition, tensioner travel, and pulley alignment.

Verify battery condition

Charge and load test before blaming the alternator or starter.

Related Inspection

Recommended Next Repair Paths

Compare repair paths before replacing parts.

Starter Replacement Cost

Use when power, ground, and command checks prove the starter is the fault.

Battery Replacement Cost

Use when load testing proves the battery cannot support cranking.

Explore Related Systems

Use when multiple systems overlap.

Diagnostic Tools

Move from symptom to code or repair context.

Open Diagnostic Tools →

Need a Quick Estimate?

Open when the likely repair is known.

Continue Estimate →