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Wanted: Bad Igniters
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saddlewarmer
Wanted: Bad Igniters
I am in the process of seeing about repairing igniters. i have fixed one for a 82 tscc 750. it worked! i have looked over the igniters off of my 82 gs1100glz and the tscc. looks like they are repairable. i just need some bad ones to see if repair is possible.Tags: None
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saddlewarmer
see thread in ""gs motorcycle discussion area"...
I'm willing to look at them all. I've looked at a local junkyard and there are a couple of different ones. my idea is to see if they are fixable, at what cost, to try and help the members here. Most electronics have common failures associated with a device. The igniters i've looked at so far work on a similar principle as far as i can tell. The one that was damaged required a new transistor in a driver circuit. the cost of that transistor would probably be 1-2 dollars. Labor on my part to fix, i haven't figured that one out yet. just a project on my part to see if its worth it. Thanks.
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oldschoolorange
The igniters you are fixing, I am guessing they are not the ones filled with epoxy? Is there anywhere you know of where I can find a circuit diagram for an igniter?
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TheCafeKid
Ive never had one go bunk, but are you saying you can even fix the ones that give off the smoke of death? Or no? Cos if so, what a boon that would be for ALL old UJM owners!!
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saddlewarmer
Originally posted by oldschoolorange View PostThe igniters you are fixing, I am guessing they are not the ones filled with epoxy? Is there anywhere you know of where I can find a circuit diagram for an igniter?
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saddlewarmer
Originally posted by TheCafeKid View PostIve never had one go bunk, but are you saying you can even fix the ones that give off the smoke of death? Or no? Cos if so, what a boon that would be for ALL old UJM owners!!
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spyug
Great idea Mr. Saddlewarmer. That service would be a boon to lots of GS owners.
There is a great guy named Dave Denowh in Ohio who tests and rebuilds TCI modules for XV Viragos and he charges out at $100 plus shipping. I think at a price like that you could make some cash and customers would be more than happy to pay. I know I would.
Keep us up to speed with the project and good luck with it. I'm rooting for you.\\/
cheers,
Spyug,
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saddlewarmer
Originally posted by spyug View PostGreat idea Mr. Saddlewarmer. That service would be a boon to lots of GS owners.
There is a great guy named Dave Denowh in Ohio who tests and rebuilds TCI modules for XV Viragos and he charges out at $100 plus shipping. I think at a price like that you could make some cash and customers would be more than happy to pay. I know I would.
Keep us up to speed with the project and good luck with it. I'm rooting for you.\\/
cheers,
Spyug,
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tone
I dont know if this will be helpfull or not but its relevant i think
my 1100ef stopped dead exiting an island a week ago :shock: & after the recovery hassles, much swearing & sweating lifting it in to a van i finally got it home 8-[
When looking for the fault i found that if i moved the connection to the ignitor with the ignition on the tacho flicked very slightly so i popped the circuit board out & re soldered 2 joints that had fractured due to vibration i assume & she fired straight up \\/
thinking about this i realised this could have been an easy fix at the roadside, the moral is dont assume its shot just cos the bike stops sparking :-D
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Forum LongTimerGSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter
Super Site Supporter- Mar 2006
- 35647
- Torrance, CA
Early Suzuki electronic ignitions use a mechanical advance, starting in 82 (I think) some bikes switched over to ignitor boxes that also controlled spark advance.
I'm generally a big fan of using stock parts where ever possible but in this case I think one could make a good case to upgrade from the stock ignitor/signal generator to a Dyna S ($120 from Z1) - particularly the early version with mechanical advance. At any rate, the cost had best come under this level or it wouldn't make a lot of sense to offer repair parts.
Sorry if this sounds like a negative, not my intention.
Good luck.Ed
To measure is to know.
Mikuni O-ring Kits For Sale...https://www.thegsresources.com/_foru...ts#post1703182
Top Newbie Mistakes thread...http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=171846
Carb rebuild tutorial...https://gsarchive.bwringer.com/mtsac...d_Tutorial.pdf
KZ750E Rebuild Thread...http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...0-Resurrection
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saddlewarmer
Originally posted by Nessism View PostEarly Suzuki electronic ignitions use a mechanical advance, starting in 82 (I think) some bikes switched over to ignitor boxes that also controlled spark advance.
I'm generally a big fan of using stock parts where ever possible but in this case I think one could make a good case to upgrade from the stock ignitor/signal generator to a Dyna S ($120 from Z1) - particularly the early version with mechanical advance. At any rate, the cost had best come under this level or it wouldn't make a lot of sense to offer repair parts.
Sorry if this sounds like a negative, not my intention.
Good luck.
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oldschoolorange
The circut drawup would be cool. I have some connections at a circut board manufacturer and will see what I can come up with. I don't think that they are all that complicated inside as you are just dealing with a few transistors. I will see if I can dig up some toasted ones and take a look at the insides
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saddlewarmer
I'm waiting on a couple to get here from some members to check out. Not much to them and i suspect that they are easily rebuildable. the ones that provide the electronic advance might be the biggest problem to repair. we'll see what happens!
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saddlewarmer
repairing will not be aproblem so far if i can get the schematic drawn. actually, the igniters are a simple device. I have one schematic almost drawn and parts list together.
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khrys771
i believe my igniter from my 86 gs550es is bad. i will be willing to mail it to you for research purposes, i dont need it back. i think its an epoxied one.
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