positive battery terminal>one large terminal on solenoid>other large terminal on solenoid>starter>engine case>ground wire>negative battery terminal.
Did you test the starter before you installed it? You can do this by taking the battery out, fastening a jumper wire from the negative terminal to the starter housing (where it bolts to the engine case is a good spot) and touching the terminal where the positive cable connects to the starter to the positive terminal. Spin=good starter. No spin=bad starter.
Sounds to me like something's not connected right or not grounded right. Here's a few things that may have been overlooked: (some are "DUH" things but check them anyway)
Battery tested good and fully charged.
Ground wire connected to negative battery terminal and ground bolt on engine case, both with CLEAN contact points.
Wire going to solenoid from battery positive, with clean contact points.
Wire going from solenoid to starter terminal, with clean contact ponts.
Starter tested.
Contact areas where starter bolts to engine clean on both starter and engine.
Battery installed correctly (positive to positive, neg to neg) (this is easier to screw up than you think)
Ground cable, starter cable and battery-to-solenoid cable checked thoroughly for corrosion, kinks, lumps under sheathing, good connectors, etc. Verify resistance (should be 0 or very, very near) from connector to connector.
Contact areas where all of the above cables connect shiny and clean.
The only other thing I can think of is that the engine is frozen, but if it were you should have at least had a spark on the solenoid. And even if the solenoid is bad, jumping it bypasses it anyway.
Don't give up!
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