PJFlynn said:5.75 volts at points is this enough juice to fire plugs. 71 commando working on electric 4 2 months replaced everything I can think of 12.48 at battery
Deets55 said:Doesn't the ballast resistor drop the voltage for the coils and points down to 6 volts on a standard ignition circuit?
Rohan said:Deets55 said:Doesn't the ballast resistor drop the voltage for the coils and points down to 6 volts on a standard ignition circuit?
Thats an interesting question.
It drops the voltage across the coils, but is the voltage drop already at the points ?
Be funny if we were pontificating over a std ignition 'feature'.
Might break out the multimeter and have a looksee.
I can't remember if an 850 even has a ballast resistor.....
Good question above too about whether it actually produces a good spark.
lcrken said:Ballast resistor and coil are not drawing current when the points are open, so no voltage drop there.
Ken
lcrken said:Ballast resistor and coil are not drawing current when the points are open, so no voltage drop there. Except for transients when power is switched, you should see 12 volts at the points when they are open and 0 volts when they are closed.
Deets55 said:lcrken said:Ballast resistor and coil are not drawing current when the points are open, so no voltage drop there.
Ken
Ken,
I have always used a test probe with a light whenever I tested points. whether it was a car, motorcycle or what not. I would just hook the alligator clip to the frame and use the probe to check the points and observe the light. In all the time I have been doing that I never realized the ballast resistor did not start causing resistance until it warmed up. I just assumed that since ( in engines with an electric starter) there is a bypass loop in the start circuit that supplies full battery voltage to the coils/points when the key (or button) is activated, that the ballast resistor was already doing its job. Damn, I just learned something new.
I now stand corrected.
Pete
L.A.B. said:lcrken said:Ballast resistor and coil are not drawing current when the points are open, so no voltage drop there. Except for transients when power is switched, you should see 12 volts at the points when they are open and 0 volts when they are closed.
To see full battery voltage at the points requires both sets of points to be open otherwise the current draw from the closed points/coil circuit causes a drop in voltage across the 'open' set (even without a ballast resistor as the coil alone will do it).
L.A.B. said:I can't see exactly what you are doing in the last photo but it looks as if you could still be measuring the 'supply' voltage?
Deets55 said:1) Negative from power supply to one side of ballast (point A)
2) other side of ballast to lead on 1156 bulb
3) other bulb lead to positive power supply (point B)
This put ballast and bulb in series between power supply leads.
I measured across point A to point B.
Looking at it now I probably should have gone from bulb lead to positive power supply w/ meter in series with bulb and ballast.
L.A.B. said:Deets55 said:1) Negative from power supply to one side of ballast (point A)
2) other side of ballast to lead on 1156 bulb
3) other bulb lead to positive power supply (point B)
This put ballast and bulb in series between power supply leads.
I measured across point A to point B.
Looking at it now I probably should have gone from bulb lead to positive power supply w/ meter in series with bulb and ballast.
Move the negative probe over to the other (lamp) side of the ballast resistor and compare the volt reading with the first.
Then, check between the two ballast resistor terminals.
L.A.B. said:Deets55 said:1) Negative from power supply to one side of ballast (point A)
2) other side of ballast to lead on 1156 bulb
3) other bulb lead to positive power supply (point B)
This put ballast and bulb in series between power supply leads.
I measured across point A to point B.
Looking at it now I probably should have gone from bulb lead to positive power supply w/ meter in series with bulb and ballast.
Move the negative probe over to the other (lamp) side of the ballast resistor and compare the volt reading with the first.
Then, check between the two ballast resistor terminals.