I’m in the process of reassembling my 1980 GS750ET. I had pulled it down to fix the voltage drops in the ignition circuit, done the strip and dip the carbs, done the carb sync, and set the valves. (Hate to admit that this has turned into a multi year project, but sometimes health gets in the way. )
So as of now, my battery puts out 12.6v. When I turn the ignition key on, I have the lights turned off so only the instrument cluster lights come on, and the battery drops to 12.5v.
I have installed an auxiliary volt gauge up by the instrument cluster. It gets its voltage from the O/W wire that powers the coils. (I wanted to be able to monitor coil voltage.) With the ignition key in the on position, and both coils unplugged, the auxiliary volt gauge reads 12.2v.
If I plug in either coil, the aux volt gauge still reads 12.2v.
BUT, if I connect up BOTH coils, the reading drops to 10.5 v.
Whats up with that ???
It seems to me that the igniter should not be grounding either coil since the engine is not turning.
What am I over looking? I could see the voltage going down a bit if the coils were being grounded by the ignitor if the coil was being charged up. Does the ignitor in fact charge up both coils in anticipation of the engine cranking over and that way which ever coil is due to be fired it is charged and ready?
So as of now, my battery puts out 12.6v. When I turn the ignition key on, I have the lights turned off so only the instrument cluster lights come on, and the battery drops to 12.5v.
I have installed an auxiliary volt gauge up by the instrument cluster. It gets its voltage from the O/W wire that powers the coils. (I wanted to be able to monitor coil voltage.) With the ignition key in the on position, and both coils unplugged, the auxiliary volt gauge reads 12.2v.
If I plug in either coil, the aux volt gauge still reads 12.2v.
BUT, if I connect up BOTH coils, the reading drops to 10.5 v.
Whats up with that ???
It seems to me that the igniter should not be grounding either coil since the engine is not turning.
What am I over looking? I could see the voltage going down a bit if the coils were being grounded by the ignitor if the coil was being charged up. Does the ignitor in fact charge up both coils in anticipation of the engine cranking over and that way which ever coil is due to be fired it is charged and ready?
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