image of a starter motor on a white background

Démarreurs

Démarreurs fiables pour moteurs marins de TMP Global

Assurez des démarrages fluides et des performances fiables avec les démarreurs TMP Global de haute qualité. Conçus pour être durables et efficaces, nos démarreurs fournissent la puissance nécessaire pour allumer facilement votre moteur marin. Que vous remplaciez un ancien démarreur ou que vous le modernisiez pour une fiabilité accrue, TMP Global propose une gamme d'options adaptées à vos besoins. Faites confiance à TMP Global pour des démarreurs de qualité supérieure offrant des performances et une durabilité constantes en milieu marin. Explorez notre sélection dès maintenant et équipez votre moteur d'un démarreur fiable pour des démarrages fluides à chaque mise à l'eau !


⛓ Live stock levels | 📲 expert help | 📚 Large catalogue

How do I make sure I’m buying the correct marine starter motor?

Start with your existing starter motor part number—this is usually the fastest match. If you don’t have it, collect your engine make/model and serial number, then confirm the basics: 12V or 24V, rotation direction (CW/CCW), pinion tooth count, and mounting flange pattern. Also check terminal layout and whether your setup uses an insulated return. If any of these don’t match, the starter may bolt on but won’t engage correctly.

What information should I use to identify a replacement starter motor?

Look for the most specific identifiers first:
The starter’s label/part number, stamped numbers on the housing, and any engine ID/serial plate details. Then compare physical and electrical specs: voltage, mounting bolt spacing, pinion tooth count, and terminal orientation. A couple of clear photos (label, pinion gear, mounting face, and terminals) makes matching far easier. Avoid guessing based on engine brand alone, models and years can use different starters.

Are inboard and outboard starter motors interchangeable?

Often, yes, but not always. Two starters can share a similar casing yet differ in tooth count, rotation, nose housing length, or terminal position. Before you replace, rule out simple causes like a weak battery, corroded terminals, or a poor engine earth/ground strap. If your starter clicks, cranks slowly, or intermittently engages, those checks can save time and ensure you choose the correct starter motor specifications.

151 produits

Choosing the Right Marine Starter Motor


Spec-led matching (not guesswork)

Starter motors can look similar but differ in voltage, mounting, rotation and pinion tooth count. Use your existing part number where possible, then confirm the key specs. If you’re replacing due to slow cranking, also check battery condition and cable connections so the new starter isn’t fighting a voltage drop.


Starter motors only, easier comparisons

This collection is focused on aftermarket starter motors for marine engines, so you’re not wading through unrelated parts. That makes it easier to compare like-for-like replacements and keep your selection accurate. Filter by the details that matter (voltage, mounting, terminals, nose style) and shortlist the closest match.



Reduce downtime with a quick pre-check

To minimize downtime, gather your engine details and a few reference photos before you order: label/part number, terminal orientation, mounting flange, and the pinion gear. That simple checklist avoids common mistakes (wrong rotation or tooth count) and speeds up finding the correct replacement for your boat.