No Spark
- Chris Lorimer
- New kid on the block
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- Posts: 20
- Joined: 03 Jan 2003, 12:55
- Location: Preston
No Spark
I wheeled the Mk2 out today, gave it a kick or 2 and nothing . Found out there were no spark. I traced the spark plug lead back to an inline rubber sheeth that was perished and looked as though it had burn't out at some stage. I took the damaged sheeth off and found what looked to be a thread of a screw screwed into the coil side wires of the lead a nd behind that was an inline spring?? What is this all about??
The second half of the spark plug lead took me to what looked like the coil (is it?). The lead where it meets the coil looks to be potted in solid like (is it?). Can I just replace the 2 halves of the spark plug lead or does the coil with potted in lead have to be replaced too? How much is a coil these days? Will a coil off another more common bike do?
Any advice would be appreciated!!
Ta.
ps. Still haven't found the float height diagram but managed to set the 16mm float height which I feel is the point at which the float needle spring loaded nipple starts to compress
The second half of the spark plug lead took me to what looked like the coil (is it?). The lead where it meets the coil looks to be potted in solid like (is it?). Can I just replace the 2 halves of the spark plug lead or does the coil with potted in lead have to be replaced too? How much is a coil these days? Will a coil off another more common bike do?
Any advice would be appreciated!!
Ta.
ps. Still haven't found the float height diagram but managed to set the 16mm float height which I feel is the point at which the float needle spring loaded nipple starts to compress
- Chris Lorimer
- New kid on the block
- Reactions:
- Posts: 20
- Joined: 03 Jan 2003, 12:55
- Location: Preston
No Spark2
Thanks for the advice guys. I don't have a cut off switch fitted. It didn't have one when I bought it?? I do have one waiting to be fitted though.
What makes me think it is the coil is the really peculiar joint in the middle of the HT lead involving a screw thread screwed into the coil side of the lead with a spring butted up to the screw on the plug side of the lead all encapsulated in a rubber sheath.
I looked at the sheath closely and it was broken, upon further investigation of what was inside the sheath I found this peculiar arrangement. The screw tapped into the lead basically just fell out so god knows how it managed to conduct a current to the plug in this state??
Does anyone else have an inline HT lead arrangement such as this?
What makes me think it is the coil is the really peculiar joint in the middle of the HT lead involving a screw thread screwed into the coil side of the lead with a spring butted up to the screw on the plug side of the lead all encapsulated in a rubber sheath.
I looked at the sheath closely and it was broken, upon further investigation of what was inside the sheath I found this peculiar arrangement. The screw tapped into the lead basically just fell out so god knows how it managed to conduct a current to the plug in this state??
Does anyone else have an inline HT lead arrangement such as this?
Chris,
That sounds like the problem mate. As far as I know mine goes straight from the plug cap to the coil. What you can try is this: Take the part of the HT lead that is still connected to the coil and strip back some of the insulation so that the wire is visible. Get a mate to kick the bike over and, with a pair of INSULATED pliers or similair hold the bare wire 1-2mm off the cylinder head as the bike is being kicked over - you should see a big blue spark jump from the end of the lead to the cylinder head. If you see the spark, this tells you that the coil is fine and that the problem lies with the join that you just dismantled. Let me know how you get on.
That sounds like the problem mate. As far as I know mine goes straight from the plug cap to the coil. What you can try is this: Take the part of the HT lead that is still connected to the coil and strip back some of the insulation so that the wire is visible. Get a mate to kick the bike over and, with a pair of INSULATED pliers or similair hold the bare wire 1-2mm off the cylinder head as the bike is being kicked over - you should see a big blue spark jump from the end of the lead to the cylinder head. If you see the spark, this tells you that the coil is fine and that the problem lies with the join that you just dismantled. Let me know how you get on.
Bargos
'Daybreak Boys', West Sussex
'Daybreak Boys', West Sussex
- Chris Lorimer
- New kid on the block
- Reactions:
- Posts: 20
- Joined: 03 Jan 2003, 12:55
- Location: Preston