Moderators: DAVID THOMPSON, phlat65
i tried that but i wasnt getting a spark,but the trouble is the plug has to be pushed in the coil and held there ,what i mean... inside the coil it must be sprung or somthing as the plug wont sit in fully ,i will have another go tomorrow ,but the plugs are clean and new,logic tells me that theres a wire loose,but since when as logic played a part in modern bike electrics,i hate electric probs and i thought i had seen the last of them when i sold my guzzi,thanks for the reply i shall have a few beers and sleep on ittomtom wrote:Have you checked you've got a spark by putting a plug in the ht lead and earthing against the bike. (use a pair of insulate pliers) other wise you might jump
The plugs may be fouled if you've been churning the engine over.
zedhead wrote:I know this might sound like the sort of thing only a dickhead would do (and I've done it myself!) but you haven't accidentally knocked the ignition switch to "off" on the right hand switchgear, have you?
Good luck
Karl
cheers,when im back in work tomorrow im going to borrow the sparkys muti meter ,b4 i book the bike in the garage [they used to be a mz dealer],i cant and dont believe the coils have failed ,both to fail at the same time ,merely through doing a plug change,i feel george boilermaker is nearer the mark,but it begs the question what happens next time i do a service and the mood im in atm i feel like selling the bugger,should of been on a bike run today and its bank holiday next weekdjsbriscoe wrote:Hi,
According to the 1000s service manual (of which I have a pdf copy) the coil resistance measurements are as follows
Primary coil resistance: 0.6 Ω at 20 °C.
Secondary coil resistance: 10 kΩ at 20 °C.
This primary coil resistance should be just about measureable with a digital multimeter although a milliohmeter would be more accurate.
I just thought the information would be useful.
David.
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