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  • V-Twin Coil

    I have been having loads of fun riddin the bike, its a 42 EL, the weather has been crappy lots of rain, however the bike runs through it just fine. The other morning I decided it really needed a wash. I washed and shined her, ran it for a minute, she coughed a bit and ran a bit rough, but had an obligation and had to be somewhere with the family.

    Anyway, back at the bike about 8 hours later and am having major trouble starting it, once it is running I took it for a ride but it still runs rough and wants to die at idle, I reached down and felt the coil and received a shock. Great. . . I put a heater onto the coil over night figuring something is amiss and it must have gotten wet, more than it should anyway, though the rubber grommets are there and everything seems dry, weird.

    My timer cover is absolutely dry no condensation, for that matter my relay is also bone dry. Its 5 am so I can't run the bike up now that I am home from the GraveYard shift, so will have a closer look around noon. (bed now). I thought I would post this asking for any thoughts as to what might be going on. It is a V-twin col and its less than a year old.

    Some questions: Is what I am experiencing a sure sign the coil packed it in. Can I dry it? any suggestions? Maybe I should be looking somewhere else, (all my wiring is pretty darn good, even the battery is good and charged.)
    Bob Beatty
    AMCA 19209

  • #2
    I read somewhere that with those coils the positive and negative were labelled backwards and if connected like you would be thinking correct it is actually backwards and it shortens the life.

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    • #3
      I had read that soewhere too. But surley something so serious would have been addressed over the years.

      I wonder, do others hook this up opposite to correspond to the + and - ?
      Last edited by NiteOwl; 06-10-2012, 10:13 PM.
      Bob Beatty
      AMCA 19209

      Comment


      • #4
        After running the ceramic heater on the coil area for a couple hours, I let her sit overnight. Today she fires up and runs fine. I am guessing something must have gotten wet and to cause the shock on the coil body sure sounds like a short somewhere. Later this week I will reckeck wiring and grounds. At least alls good now and no more baths.
        Bob Beatty
        AMCA 19209

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by NiteOwl View Post
          I had read that soewhere too. But surley something so serious would have been addressed over the years.

          I wonder, do others hook this up opposite to correspond to the + and - ?
          Here you go, Bob. I went looking into it and this is what I found:
          http://www.caimag.com/forum/showthre...uot-coils-Fail

          Note particularly the "Fire Trucks," International Harvester reference, being the most complete.

          Along with the enlightened conversation that follows. Hope this helps.
          Last edited by Sargehere; 06-10-2012, 10:50 PM.
          Gerry Lyons #607
          http://www.37ul.com/
          http://flatheadownersgroup.com/

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          • #6
            Gerry, what can I say other than Thank You! that is so informative and very usefull information. I am switching my wires around as soon as I get home.
            Last edited by NiteOwl; 06-11-2012, 04:48 PM.
            Bob Beatty
            AMCA 19209

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            • #7
              Thanks Gerry for that information. We too get the same coils down here and I had my second fail just a few months ago. I had the coil rewound and found that I ended up with a much stronger spark. He did say that he thought that one problem was that the epoxy used around the windings was brittle so that if/when it cracked with vibration etc the winding was broken. He re-packed the rewind with silicon. I'm going to have the second done as a reserve and will take your information to he that rewinds the coils. The case on the first coil was not a real neat job so this time I'm doing the dismantling and re-assembly myself. I do still need to know if there is an easy way to get everything out without damaging the case. I have removed the bottom plate at this stage and that is all.

              One thing to watch out for is if the importer of the coils does reverse the positive and negative without notice we will all be back to square one with him selling twice as many coils again, or am I being cynical.

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              • #8
                All switched now, starts right up. Hopefully I can extend the life of the plugs and the coil for awhile until I find an original, rebuild. Thanks again for the very useful information, I learned something from this thread.
                Bob Beatty
                AMCA 19209

                Comment


                • #9
                  You can also check coil polarity with a volt meter, it's much easier. Set the volt meter to it's highest scale, positve lead to ground, negative to the plug terminal. Kick the bike, ignition on (don't start it) if the needle goes down the polarity is wrong, if it goes up.... you're good to go. The several Tiawan Tedd coils I've checked were indeed backwards from OEM.
                  Doug.
                  Doug McLaughlin #6607
                  NorCal, USA

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                  • #10
                    Here shortly I will be hooking up a new repop coil. Thank-you for the "easier" way Doug. I'll be giving that a shot.
                    Cory Othen
                    Membership#10953

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                    • #11
                      Thanks Doug. I know what everyone who reads this will be doing with voltmeter in hand.

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                      • #12
                        I found the easy / easy way. I looked at my coil and saw the little + sign behind the "wrong" terminal. Just switched 'em.
                        Attached Files

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                        • #13
                          It doesn't matter which way you connect the coil primary leads. One plug always fires reverse polarity with a waste spark system, and by reversing the polarity, you're just making the opposite plug fire reverse polarity. You can't compare it with an automotive coil that doesn't have a waste spark; and a coil itself is no more or less effecient when energized in revese.

                          Maybe the VT coils are just junk! (I can see this is going to be a p--ing match....)

                          Tim

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Hollywood View Post
                            I found the easy / easy way. I looked at my coil and saw the little + sign behind the "wrong" terminal. Just switched 'em.
                            Sure.... state the obvious.....
                            Cory Othen
                            Membership#10953

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by knuckleheadtim View Post
                              It doesn't matter which way you connect the coil primary leads. One plug always fires reverse polarity with a waste spark system, and by reversing the polarity, you're just making the opposite plug fire reverse polarity. You can't compare it with an automotive coil that doesn't have a waste spark; and a coil itself is no more or less effecient when energized in reverse.

                              Maybe the VT coils are just junk! (I can see this is going to be a p--ing match....)

                              Tim

                              There's more to it than that, Tim! One of the coils, either primary or secondary, is thrown (wound) in the wrong direction, is my information, which reverses the N - S polarity, making the inside of the coil a bit like, in water, paddling up the river against the flow, when compared to the way the coils were designed to work.
                              Check the International Harvester Fire Truck URL. They specifically address "waste spark." There is just more to it.

                              Refs:

                              http://mgaguru.com/mgtech/ignition/ig104.htm
                              http://www.guy.weatherall.dsl.pipex.com/ht/coil.htm

                              http://firetrucksandequipment.tpub.c...-14P-1_545.htm
                              Last edited by Sargehere; 06-15-2012, 01:58 AM.
                              Gerry Lyons #607
                              http://www.37ul.com/
                              http://flatheadownersgroup.com/

                              Comment

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