This is the problem. Every two hundred miles or so I had to clean the #2-3 plugs to keep performance up. It ran great after that. Last week I took it on a 60 mile trip in the 70 degree weather. Three miles from home I lost all kinds of power. Making it home I cleaned the plugs and learned that they weren't the problem. The bike was (is) falling flat on it's face when I twist the throttle. It sounds smooth when idling though. No backfiring or popping sounds. I was suspicious of the coil as I learned that those two cylinders (2-3) wouldn't fire. A friend gave me an old coil to try on my bike, correct model and everything. The plugs still wouldn't fire. I checked the power to the coils and learned that the left coil, when sitting on it (2-3) wasn't grounded. I located a wire under my seat (Black and yellow) that was broken from the seat closing on it. I thought that the broken wire may have been my problem as an intermittent fault. I fixed the ground. The plugs would still not fire. Thinking that the new coil was defective, I placed the original coil back in. You guessed it, no fire in 2&3. Then I tried to mess with my points and I think I really screwed things up. Now it starts easily, sounds good under 1500rpm but when its put under any kind of load, it spits sputters and shuts off. Help!!!
My questions follow;
1/ Should I have power going to the coil when the ignition is on and not running?
2/ Is one wire hot and one a ground?
3/ What is the easiest way for someone who knows nothing about points, to set them?
4/ Could the points be the problem.
5/ Could there be juice to the coil, but not to the plugs due to the points?
I don't mind putting time and some money into the bike, I just wish I knew I that I was heading in the right direction.
Thanks in advance for any help.
Dave W.
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