Coil / condenser question
Posted: Mon Nov 19, 2012 2:49 pm
Hi Guys
I hope everyone had a nice weekend. I have a 42 M that was converted to 12 V. Well most of it got converted. I just switched over the starter. It needed a rebuild badly anyway. The motor ran fine and did not hiccup. As soon as I got the alternator working the motor began to cut off after a few minutes. The time it would run would get shorter the more I tried to run it. I tried pulling out the choke as soon as it began to lose power but it did not help. Pulled out the carberator bowl drain and had plenty of flow. It reacted the same as if I killed the ignition, no spitting or sputtering. I checked the ignition switch too. Jumped it out at one point I ordered a new coil this morning thinking maybe it was bad and it could still be 6 v too. Does a bad condensor act this way too ? I am replacing the points and condensor tonight. The battery voltage was just below 12 v prior to fixing the alternator, just under 14 v after.
Thanks
I hope everyone had a nice weekend. I have a 42 M that was converted to 12 V. Well most of it got converted. I just switched over the starter. It needed a rebuild badly anyway. The motor ran fine and did not hiccup. As soon as I got the alternator working the motor began to cut off after a few minutes. The time it would run would get shorter the more I tried to run it. I tried pulling out the choke as soon as it began to lose power but it did not help. Pulled out the carberator bowl drain and had plenty of flow. It reacted the same as if I killed the ignition, no spitting or sputtering. I checked the ignition switch too. Jumped it out at one point I ordered a new coil this morning thinking maybe it was bad and it could still be 6 v too. Does a bad condensor act this way too ? I am replacing the points and condensor tonight. The battery voltage was just below 12 v prior to fixing the alternator, just under 14 v after.
Thanks