Moderators: DAVID THOMPSON, phlat65
Puffs wrote:Hi James!
You have replaced much, sounds like quite an overhaul. Maybe a poor connection somewhere, or corrosion, anyway, lack of electrical continuity. Mine sometimes has an issue in the fuse box (which you replaced).
With ignition switched ON and the contact breakers (= points) OPEN, check that you have voltage across them. And with the breakers CLOSED, that the coil gets current.
Pull the condenser connection off & see if it then sparks. And yes, try another plug, or just hold the HT cable a few mm from earth.
If still no luck, try another coil (any old 12V coil should do for a test).
DAVID THOMPSON wrote:after all else ground the head on the motor to the battery minus
some where its not grounding the system correct
Puffs wrote:An earthing issue of the engine is possible, and although not very likely (as you measured a proper voltage across the open points), it's worth a try. Is easy.
Did you pull the condenser off? That might have shorted.
I don't know what the resistivity of the primary coil should be. Around 11 Ohms is plausible, but it should be a stable value. Around 11kOhm for the secondary also sounds plausible. Nevertheless, this kind of ignition is very simple. If you have voltage/charging current across your coil, and your contact breakers work, and it doesn't leak across the condenser, and you have electrical continuity where it's required, there's only the coil left. See if you can find another one for a test.
Puffs wrote:An earthing issue of the engine is possible, and although not very likely (as you measured a proper voltage across the open points), it's worth a try. Is easy.
Did you pull the condenser off? That might have shorted.
I don't know what the resistivity of the primary coil should be. Around 11 Ohms is plausible, but it should be a stable value. Around 11kOhm for the secondary also sounds plausible. Nevertheless, this kind of ignition is very simple. If you have voltage/charging current across your coil, and your contact breakers work, and it doesn't leak across the condenser, and you have electrical continuity where it's required, there's only the coil left. See if you can find another one for a test.
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