I picked up an '82 GS450L from a coworker in March(?). It sat outside for years before I picked it up. I went through the majority of the bike, checking and replacing some things as I went along. I finally got it up and running last weekend. It rode great for two days, though a partially clogged main jet in the left cylinder carb was causing some issues. I was riding it home and I lost cylinder one completely, and shortly after i lost cylinder two. I contributed it to "running out of fuel" since I had only planned to "go around the block". However, once back at the garage and gassed up, the main fuse had blown, and the cylinder 1 ignition coil was completely burnt up, with some cooked (tar-looking) internal juices escaping along with the scent of what I would assume a fire at the HP factory would smell like. A multimeter confirmed it was shot. I tried 3 known-good spare ignition coils with no luck on getting the left cylinder to fire. The right cylinder works no problem, with any of these ignition coils. I've heard that these bikes are notorious for burning out igniters, and sometimes can do so one cylinder at a time. Now, my question is, before my brand new ignition coil comes in the mail, I want to find the source of my problem before plugging it in and cooking a brand new one due to another fault down the line.
Is there a multimeter bench-test procedure for the ignitor? Could a RR cause this issue? I do not have a service manual at my disposal, and scanning the internet for a PDF of any of these procedures has yielded mediocre results.
Thanks a ton for the awesome information this site has provided me over the past 6 months, and helped a bike n00b make some great headway!
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