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one Black coil, one Grey coil?
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one Black coil, one Grey coil?
I've got a 81 gs550L. I noticed when i had the tank off that someone has spliced a grey coil in while the other that appears to be factory is black. i have not tried to start the bike yet. i've been going over it because it has sat for god only knows how many years. The grey coils were for points ignitions werent they?Tags: None
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Some GS coils were black, some were gray, some were cream colored. They all work the same.
Measure the primary and secondary resistances. If you get 3 - 4 ohms on the primary and 25K - 35K ohms on the secondary, don't worry about them not looking the same, they'll work fine.sigpic
SUZUKI: 1978 GS1000E; 1980 GS1000G; 1982 GS650E; 1982 GS1100G; 1982 GS1100E; 1985 GS700ES
HONDA: 1981 CB900F Super Sport
KAWASAKI: 1981 KZ550A-2; 1984 ZX750A-2 (aka GPZ750); 1984 KZ700A-1
YAMAHA: 1983 XJ750RK Seca
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shinzon1
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Crankthat
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Joe Garfield
There are resistors in the plug caps - if you look inside you'll see a slot for a screwdriver. Inside is a ~5 kOhm resistor. I am just learning about this as I am sorting problems with my ignition coils. I could not get a reading across the secondary coil (spark plug side) due to a bad resistor. I removed the cap and got a low reading across the coil, so something is going on inside causing a short.
High resistance is associated with the internal windings - many windings are used to significantly amplify the 12v input voltage, hence the reading of ~30,00+ Ohms (with caps installed). So a reduced resistance across the secondary coils is a sign of degradation. At the same time, the resistors/caps will lose conductivity as they corrode so resistance will go UP across the cap. This means that a shorted coil can be masked by a corroding plug cap, which is part of what was going on with one of my coils.
The plug caps are actually threaded onto the spark plug wires, if you need to remove them for anything. Here is a pic of what is actually inside. The threaded piece is the plug contact. The white cylinder is the resistor (this resistor measured OK, the bad ones were black). The spring has some corrosion on it which was acting as an electrical insulator. I could not read a resistance across it. So even though the resistor was good the plug cap was not functioning properly. If you look at the narrow end of the plug cap, you can just see the brass or copper 'tip' which is threaded. That end threads into the spark plug wire.
This plug cap is serviceable since the resistor is measuring OK. Personally I would not use the spring - it could be cleaned off, and the loss in conductivity may or may not be noticeable. A new cap is about $3.50 so it does not seem worth the effort to restore it at this time, however the parts have been saved/donated for if the need arises.
Last edited by Guest; 12-13-2014, 10:30 PM.
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Originally posted by Don Williams View PostI don't believe so, these caps do not look like the stock or ngk caps, the're kind of flexible feeling.1981 gs650L
"We are all born ignorant, but you have to work hard to stay stupid" Ben Franklin
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