>>Phil, This type of problem is usually due to a high resistance in the circuit or a bad starter motor. The resistance is the cheaper and easier to deal with. I would remove and check all battery leads to be sure they are clean and then tightly fastened. This means the positive battery lead on both the battery and the solenoid end, the lead going from the solenoid to the starter, both ends. The ground wire, battery end and engine block end. I would remove the ground wire from the engine block and clean the block surface and the terminal before re-tightening it. Look inside the wire side of the terminals for all battery, ground and solenoid leads to make sure that years of vibration haven't caused a significant number of strands to break. If there are any home made connections like those clamp on battery terminals, I would replace them or at least cut them off and redo the connection. If any of the wires are green inside, probably best to replace them as well. A quick and dirty test of the solenoid is to use a jumper cable and jump from the battery positive to the starter side of the solenoid. This should not be done often, as it can really mess up the threads on the solenoid when the spark occurs, but it should spin the starter pretty well if the rest of the circuit is good. If it does, but the starter is slow using the key to turn it over, it might indicate a bad solenoid. On the distributor. If you have a multimeter, you can disconnect the wire leading from the negative coil terminal to the distributor and check the reading with the multimeter while cranking the engine. The distributor lead should go to one of the multimeter leads and the other meter lead should make contact with ground on the engine block. The meter should be on the lowest Ohms setting. As the engine cranks, if the meter shows alternating 0 ohms and then infinity, chances are everything inside the distributor is good enough to at least start the engine. Make sure the lead is disconnected from the coil before you try this or you could damage the circuit on the meter. Using the same meter, make sure there is voltage going to the positive side of the coil when the key is in the run position. Make sure the voltage is still there while cranking, as it is a different circuit while cranking, that cuts out the ballast resister. Hope this helps. Bill Huff >>Alright all, >>I have tried everything to clean the rotor and the dual points(which >>are new) >>and still the car only cranks.Question the motor when it does crank, it >>cranks >>like it is under a strain, It has a Brand new battery (bought 2 days >>ago) and >>a good alternater, could it be the Starter,it is the original one? >>Thanks to all, >>Phil >> >> >>Yahoo! Groups Sponsor >>ADVERTISEMENT >> >>To send a message to this group, send an email to: >>Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >> >>For list server instructions, go to >><http://www.chrysler300club.com/yahoolist/inst.htm>http://www.chrysler300c >>lub.com/yahoolist/inst.htm >> >>To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: >>Chrysler300-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >> >> >> >>Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the >><http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/>Yahoo! Terms of Service. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]