How Points and Condensers Work Small Engines

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  • čas přidán 23. 02. 2014
  • Breaker Points on Aircraft, Briggs and Stratton, Tecumseh, Kholer, Clinton, Wisconsin, Honda, etc.
    Convert your small engine to electronic ignition amzn.to/20Ymf82
    Magneto
    Replace points on the following models:
    Briggs small: • Briggs & Stratton Clea...
    Briggs large: • Large Single Cylinder ...
    Tecumseh : • Tecumseh Points and Co...
    Honda : • Honda Trail 70 / 50 Po...
    HOW a Governor works: • Governor Adjustment an...
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Komentáře • 281

  • @wyattoneable
    @wyattoneable Před 10 lety +4

    As a guy who likes taking care of his own equipment these type of tips are invaluable, thanks for spending the time to teach.

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 10 lety

      Thanks.. It's old technology but still out there.

  • @DP-hy4vh
    @DP-hy4vh Před 6 lety +1

    Best explanation for condensers, coils and points on small engines. I've had to replace condensers on old lawnmowers and generators over the years.

  • @JOEZEP54
    @JOEZEP54 Před 10 lety +2

    Great explanation on points, ignition system!!!
    I have a Wheel Horse that I bough new in 1976 that has points. Years back I pulled the flywheel only to find that the points are conveniently located on the block. Can’t beat experience or having a manual :)

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 10 lety

      Yeah, you learn from experience. I've done that to many times.

  • @lennieliriano87
    @lennieliriano87 Před 3 lety

    Amazing video! Lawn mowers, generators... a lot of different applications 👍🏽

  • @mattcasdorph
    @mattcasdorph Před 8 lety

    I've seen points and condenser's but never really knew how they worked, interesting stuff. Very informative video.

  • @TheShadeTreeFixitMan
    @TheShadeTreeFixitMan Před 10 lety

    Good tutorial and a very simple explanation. Even I could understand it. Thank you.

  • @reparacionesdeautos
    @reparacionesdeautos Před 10 měsíci

    Sending a big hug to you my friend, from Argentina, once again spreading and teaching very useful information! See you!

  • @fouroakfarm
    @fouroakfarm Před 8 lety

    Really appreciate this information. I have a Tecumseh H50 that I'm trying to get running and couldn't wrap my head around how the ignition worked. Thank you!

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 8 lety +1

      +Bike Man Dan You're welcome. I'm glad it helped. I do have a video on the Tecumseh points system czcams.com/video/HV9MJwsUP_4/video.html

  • @bikefarmtaiwan1800
    @bikefarmtaiwan1800 Před 10 lety +18

    Thanks for the video. Good stuff and a generally clear explanation. I feel you may have got CDI and points ignition systems somewhat confused. What you may find happens is that the current generated as a double and reversed wave ( as you pointed out) is allowed to flow through the points to ground creating a circuit. This circuit is broken by the points at the peak of the second wave, The condenser does stop arcing but more than just to save the points it precipitates a sharp instantaneous collapse of the magnetic field and it is this which generates the massively high voltage in the secondary coil. Keep up the excellent work I love your tips!

    • @ziggyinta
      @ziggyinta Před 2 lety

      My thoughts as well, until later in the video he shows a points system I haven't seen, a bit different to a motorcycle or car but yes, is points, well... a single point lol

    • @frankdavidson9675
      @frankdavidson9675 Před rokem +2

      you have an error in your explanation there is no current flowing thru the points the points open lifts a gd off the condenser lead allowing a current flow thru the primary coil thru the condenser to gd via the metal can and screw to the base of dist this flow creares ahigh voltage in sec . coil sending it to dist cao and plugs as points closecond lead is gd again stopping voltage the only time points have current is either wrong condenser or defect condenser the voltage can not get thru the cond.so it jumps the tiny gap at open points to gd which causes pitting of the points over time you can test this with your voltmeter conn to the cond lead with switch in run pos you will see batter volts (12) on that screw now open the points the voltage falls off. hope this helps some one most of the time the condenser is failing if you have spark tbls.

  • @normstaley9799
    @normstaley9799 Před 5 lety +26

    sorry you need to read up on the magneto ignition system, the points dont stay open most of tbe time and the condenser does not feed current back through the primary coil

  • @caddisking
    @caddisking Před 10 lety

    Awesome...thanks for the info. Hope your having a good winter in Salt Lake. Its been a banner year for plowing and pond hockey here in Cleveland.

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 10 lety

      It's been really mild. I really enjoy a ton of snow so I'm envious.

  • @tlgrimmy
    @tlgrimmy Před 9 lety

    Thanks for the video. I've got a little 2 hp Briggs 60102 and after it started running lean and dying on me, I decided to replace all of the gaskets (intake, gas tank, crankcase, valve cover, and even the head gasket). I had adjusted to carb with no luck, so I figured I'd just do a little overhaul since the gaskets were cheap enough. I checked the points and condenser and all seemed really clean plus no cracks on the top of the condenser. I sanded the points and set the gap to 20 thousandths, although they were pretty clean to begin with and the gap was at 22 thousandths before. I fired it back up and it will run quite well at half throttle and idle pretty good, but will sputter and want to quit at full throttle. Tried adjusting the carb both directions with no luck. I would assume my points and condenser are fine if it runs so consistently at half throttle, but thought I'd run it by you to see what you think. I just regapped the spark plug, but figure I could replace that just to eliminate it as a cause.

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 9 lety +1

      tlgrimmy Sounds carb related. The fuel pickup tube that drops into the tank can become blocked. It has a fine mesh screen and it can become blocked if you have a rusty gas tank. Before this I would make sure the Main Jet is clean by unscrewing the nut+screw as an assembly. Then remove the Jet with a wide flat head screwdriver. Spray carb cleaner through this. Inside the carb hole that your pulled the Jet out of there are some holes behind where this jet sat; clean those as well. Generally if the engine sparks then it sparks and doesn't change with RPM; if anything it gets stronger with speed.

    • @tlgrimmy
      @tlgrimmy Před 9 lety +1

      sixtyfiveford Thanks for getting back to me so quickly, much appreciated! After reading your response, I pulled the needle and jet, cleaned everything up thoroughly as you mentioned and then I noticed that the needle had a bur on it that I hadn't seen before. It looked as if it had been screwed in all the way and tightened down enough to ruin the taper on the needle and create a bur. That makes sense of the issue with the needle not making much difference on gas flow, as that bur was probably restricting flow. I chucked it in my drill press and carefully filed away the bur and polished things back up. I put it all back together and viola! It runs infinitely better now. I did end up having to keep the needle out only 1 turn due to shortening it when I filed it down, but at least I found the culprit. I'll go ahead and buy a new needle and jet just to get it at it's best though. Thanks again for pointing me in the right direction, that really helped! Feels good to have the problem finally solved.

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 9 lety

      That's great. Keep in mind that it really isn't important how many turns out you go. The 1.5 turns is just a number to get the machine running but it needs to be fine tuned from there. At full throttle turn it in slightly until it begins to stumbles then out until the same occurs. Set it to the middle of these readings and maybe even 1/8+- of a turn out.

  • @1954BJohn
    @1954BJohn Před 10 lety +2

    A fountain of knowledge - thanks!!

  • @MyFREEFrugalHomestead
    @MyFREEFrugalHomestead Před 10 lety

    Great simple overview and explanation. I can and have done mechanical repairs but the electronic parts have always been a bit of mystery to me..........Thanks again.

  • @garryludwick2990
    @garryludwick2990 Před 3 lety +12

    Now I'm really confused
    I thought the points were closed most of the time and they opened momentarily for the power to travel to the plug instead of ground.

    • @njkip
      @njkip Před 3 lety +9

      They are closed most of the time, they open momentarily at whatever degrees before tdc. This collapses the magnetic field creating the high voltage current...creating the spark....so you are right Garry.....he's wrong....!

    • @deanhenthorn1890
      @deanhenthorn1890 Před 3 lety +1

      Garry Ludwick. Any engine that uses points and condenser, pre electronic ignition era, knows you are right!

    • @twoeydad
      @twoeydad Před 3 lety

      @@deanhenthorn1890 I have this same engine and the points are OPEN most of the time. I've seen a few engines that work like this including the Onan engines. My understanding is that either system can work to break the electrical field and cause the energy to pass through the secondary winding and through the spark plug to ground.

  • @Yellow.Dog.
    @Yellow.Dog. Před 10 lety

    A day that you don't learn something is a day wasted. I have picked up a lot of information and you have jogged my memory every now and then. Thank you!

  • @davidtyrrell1115
    @davidtyrrell1115 Před 6 lety +1

    Good explanation of how points work..... do you have a vid on a lawn boy D series engine points setup. Thanks

  • @Madeinwem
    @Madeinwem Před 3 lety +1

    Great video, very useful, thankyou.

  • @donschneider7252
    @donschneider7252 Před 5 lety

    I like the good clear explanation and demonstration

  • @farmitecture2060
    @farmitecture2060 Před 8 lety

    Just a quick question the new points I installed for my Kohler K321. If I can see a bright spark when the motor is turning over would this indicate a bad condenser? Thanks for posting the video.

  • @2LateIWon
    @2LateIWon Před 10 lety

    I already knew all of this but I guess your so captivating I had to keep watching LOL This is Awesome for a new beginner in small engine repair.

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 10 lety

      Yeah, not many points machines left out there but it always helps to know how stuff works.

  • @Patroand
    @Patroand Před 10 lety

    Very interesting, never know that. Neat and clear explanation.

  • @Squatmyster
    @Squatmyster Před 7 lety

    Very informative thanks . I have a 1978 Bultaco Sherpa 250. Can't seem to get it to run right, it'll run at full pelt or not at all. Think I might have wired the primery ciol up wrong or may have a short some where. are the Primery and the condeser bolted to the engine ( to ground ) or are they insulated in some ay

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 7 lety

      Are you sure it's not a fuel/carburetor problem?

  • @HallingAdventures
    @HallingAdventures Před 2 lety

    That is the info I needed. Thank you!

  • @gskaloyan
    @gskaloyan Před 10 lety

    This is some pretty fascinating information

  • @mindfreak001009
    @mindfreak001009 Před 10 lety

    one month or more in school where i can leaned this things in less than 7 minutes...thanks man!

  • @cunningmouse8064
    @cunningmouse8064 Před 2 lety

    i'vу been looking for this video for sooooooo long. thank you kindly

  • @radroy92
    @radroy92 Před 5 lety

    What about magnetos for twin cylinder engines? I believe the secondary coil is not grounded by a coil tap and only grounds by arcing across both spark plugs.

  • @roxyoscar8350
    @roxyoscar8350 Před 2 lety

    oh thank you so much i have my test and i needed an explanation about Condensor

  • @doncarr8892
    @doncarr8892 Před 9 lety

    I have a Wisconsin Engine on a Essick Plaster mixer, I was told once a magneto gets wet it ruins it. I wish you could show the points or magneto. Q. Is the transformer & Magneto the same?

  • @nainka11
    @nainka11 Před 3 lety

    Thank you and Well done........I have a Puch moped........the ignition system incorporates a "kill switch" fitted to the handlebars...........wil this basically be a open circuit or a grounded circuit, to/from the coil ? Thanks

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 3 lety

      Most are just a ground from the coil to prevent the coil from building up a charge.

  • @not2fast4u2c
    @not2fast4u2c Před 10 lety +1

    Great Demo !!!

  • @ghetinknotabush8602
    @ghetinknotabush8602 Před 9 měsíci

    A secondary tap of the coil provides a signal to do many things prior to hi voltage rectification for the spark plug. Many people are
    looking for passive analog devices to support electrical needs sans onboard battery.

  • @wtbm123
    @wtbm123 Před 10 lety +2

    Good video gets right to the point.

  • @udizzy1969
    @udizzy1969 Před 10 lety +1

    another great info vid bro, cheers

  • @old64goat
    @old64goat Před 10 lety +1

    Thanks for the video, good info.

  • @TheFlacker99
    @TheFlacker99 Před 10 lety

    Nice, simple explanation.

  • @chriscastellanos6301
    @chriscastellanos6301 Před rokem

    Like the simple explanation

  • @dennisc103
    @dennisc103 Před 8 lety

    really great video! thanks A lot.!

  • @futurelegance196
    @futurelegance196 Před 8 lety +2

    Do you really have a 'dent' in your crankshaft ? Normally there's a 'bulge', because the secondary circuit gets activated when the points open, not close as you say! Or is this only with battery equipped systems? Does this system work the other way around than normal? please clarify, some1...

  • @Rustbelt_Research
    @Rustbelt_Research Před 10 lety

    Great video as always SixtyFive!

  • @7AirCanuck7
    @7AirCanuck7 Před 6 lety

    Hey man, I have been wondering for a while now how to sort the mystery of this system as I bought a 1978 Honda CB550k. This really clarified it, and I'm sure I'll watch it a few times. Thanks!!

  • @kyj565
    @kyj565 Před 7 lety +1

    Thanks for this :) been working on making a Honda CG125 run off it's own steam with no lights or main loom or anything as a fun little flat tracker project and whilst I kinda knew what to do, I've never had a points bike before so this confirmed everything for me :)

  • @PacoOtis
    @PacoOtis Před 8 lety

    Well done! Thanks Dude!

  • @cosmosdaniel4791
    @cosmosdaniel4791 Před 4 lety

    Do you know about villiers C45 industrial 4 stroke engines and magnetos timings.

  • @rickgoldberg2392
    @rickgoldberg2392 Před 8 lety

    Very good video!!

  • @mcallahan9060
    @mcallahan9060 Před 10 lety

    Thanks for the information.

  • @mikemcguire7579
    @mikemcguire7579 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for explaining this.

  • @averagejew
    @averagejew Před 8 lety

    Great vid... Would love to see if you come across points failing in leaf blowers. I've had two blowers go bad (no spark) in 2 years. The latest was a Poulan. Noticing on youtube a lot of the poulan leaf blowers are failing for different reasons.

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 8 lety

      +averagejew Only stuff made pre mid 80's will have points. Other than that your ignition coil can short out but it is pretty rare.

  • @transdetendal
    @transdetendal Před 10 lety

    very nicely explained

  • @steve-si3oz
    @steve-si3oz Před 3 lety

    Thanks. Very helpful.

  • @barneyboy7771
    @barneyboy7771 Před 7 lety

    Even on youtube will see video's by mechanics, auto electricians and others who have absolutely no idea that the condenser (capacitor) boosts the secondary voltage. Good video.

    • @motoprof1441
      @motoprof1441 Před 6 lety

      How can the condenser send current back through the primary while there is no return path to ground. The points open, which breaks the ground. The magnetic field collapses causing current in the secondary. Once the points close again, the stored current is fed back into the primary and helps boost the next cycle. Current cannot flow without a ground or am I missing something here?

    • @barneyboy7771
      @barneyboy7771 Před 6 lety

      Hard to explain without a video or drawings. Some sites miss out on some details. The information you are looking for must mention the condensor absorbs the points spark but also provides the reverse direction current required to generate the high voltage. Try czcams.com/video/W94iksaQwUo/video.html

    • @motoprof1441
      @motoprof1441 Před 6 lety

      Thanks for the reply. I've been looking online to see how exactly this works being as there is no path to ground while the points are open. The condenser is grounded, so maybe it's just in the way the condenser is made?

    • @motoprof1441
      @motoprof1441 Před 6 lety

      I found the answer :-)
      Once the field collapses in the primary winding's, the voltage stored in the condenser is higher than what's in the primary circuit. The insulated foil sheet inside the condenser forces the stored voltage back through the primary winding's, which makes for a longer duration spark at the plug. This keeps happening until all the stored voltage is used up.
      I had to search a lot of old books to find this info. Finally found it in a auto fundamental's book from 1960. Thanks for the thought provoking reply :-)

  • @mtngoat58
    @mtngoat58 Před 10 lety

    good solid info ---thanks

  • @tblbaby
    @tblbaby Před 10 lety

    Nice info :) you do a great course in misc great stuff to know if you like to fix and work on stuff. ... you can use that if you wanna lol. I've got a Walmart Mower that's been great, but it's totally different than anything I ever saw, baffling a bit, but I better figure it out cause grass will be coming soon.

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 10 lety

      Yeah, once the grass starts growing it won't stop.

  • @peterd7603
    @peterd7603 Před 4 lety +1

    This seems to show the spark plug fires every stroke but it seems a four stroke should fire every other stroke. I suppose it could fire right at tdc of the intake stroke also and it wouldn't affect anything?

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 4 lety

      Exactly it's what they call a wasted spark system. All small engines fire on the intake stroke as well as the compression.

  • @McFly-guitars-n-stuff
    @McFly-guitars-n-stuff Před 2 měsíci

    Come On Let's help this guy get to a thousand subscriptions!

  • @ahumad13
    @ahumad13 Před 5 lety

    It is possible to remove the magnetron and put on the ignition system of a motorcycle.

  • @TimODon87
    @TimODon87 Před 10 lety

    Great video

  • @Thetrucky69
    @Thetrucky69 Před 8 lety

    This information is excellent.

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 8 lety

      +Thetrucky69 Hey Thanks.

    • @Thetrucky69
      @Thetrucky69 Před 8 lety

      Not a problem at all champ. Very accurate info, cheers.

  • @MrIFixEverything
    @MrIFixEverything Před 10 lety +1

    Thanks for another informative video.

  • @tomdavies5887
    @tomdavies5887 Před 5 lety

    Hey, great video. I'm struggling with an old Briggs 2hp... I'm getting power to the plug but not enough to make it jump. Any ideas?

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 5 lety

      Weak spark would generally be a bad condensor. But you say you're getting no spark so I would clean the point contacts.

    • @tomdavies5887
      @tomdavies5887 Před 5 lety

      @@sixtyfiveford sorted, thanks!

  • @Viktory2k1
    @Viktory2k1 Před 7 lety +1

    I have a TecumsehH540 or HS40 and the points are closed all the time until a lobe on the crank open them up for a few degrees of rotation, seems backwards from what you say being open 90% of the time, either way, no spark and while points are open no resistance from the open point to ground, I haven't worked with points for 30 years so I forgot alot. Any ideas on how to test? Nice Vid!

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 7 lety

      I do have a video on swapping these czcams.com/video/HV9MJwsUP_4/video.html
      but your already in so may not help much. The most common, no spark culprit in order is: dirty/greasy/corroded point connection that don't make a good connection, the ground kill wire still engaged, dead condensor, shorting out the spark, and finally a dead ignition coil.
      So I always like to pull the kill wire off the kill location from under the carb to eliminate it. Then I run some fine sand paper(300+) through the points and spray then off with carb cleaner or brake cleaner to degrease them. Then I try to get a spark.

  • @dalenassar9152
    @dalenassar9152 Před 5 lety

    Thanks for the excellent video! ...two questions:
    1) Is the spark plug mounted above the EXACT center of the piston on top of a combustion chamber.
    2) Also, at TDC, how far from the piston is the bottom of the plug?
    This information will be of GREAT help!
    Thanks much,

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 5 lety

      1) No.
      2) varies by engine.

    • @frankdavidson9675
      @frankdavidson9675 Před rokem

      the plug can be any where in the head as long as it not touching any thing look at it this way on compresion stroke you can light it with a spark any where

  • @ZippoVarga
    @ZippoVarga Před 10 lety

    65!! I love your banner!! Excellent explanation of how the entire ignition system works on a magneto engine!! Where did you get your banner made? Cheers!! Zip~

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 10 lety

      ZippoVarga Thanks. I got it made online. It was at a party store shindigz.com. Create-A-Banner 18"x54"

  • @paavo1294
    @paavo1294 Před 5 lety

    so when that gap is closed and points are touching eachothers then it will give spark?

  • @zx8401ztv
    @zx8401ztv Před 10 lety

    Smashing video :-))
    Hmm i allways thought the capacitor and primary were like a tuned circuit and produced a stable magnetic field, then when the points closed the sudden loss made the primary over react (as charged inductors dont like change) and create a spike of intense magnitism trying to counteract the loss and firing the secondary.
    Looks like i may have been wrong :-((
    Inductors do react to losses though, they do have some very odd propertys lol.

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 10 lety

      I knew the basics but I had to read up just to make sure my ideas were right.

  • @amanouillazar675
    @amanouillazar675 Před 4 lety

    I had a ST350 Ariens snow blower with no spark so I change the Ignition coil- condenser and the point but still no spark
    can you help me
    thank you

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 4 lety

      Make sure the kill wire isn't engaged. This can be with a key switch or throttle set to low. It's probably best just to disconnect it from under the carburetor and let it dangle out of the way.

  • @triggeral
    @triggeral Před rokem

    Love this

  • @nevhath
    @nevhath Před 7 lety

    well explained mate.

  • @1fanger
    @1fanger Před 10 lety

    Hi, good explanation. You need to follow up on how the engine revs are governed as well as the theory behind the engine revving up and down. Thanks

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 10 lety

      I'm on top of it. Right here czcams.com/video/bOHv3X42-wk/video.html
      An engine that revs up and down is a clogged idle circuit in the carb.

    • @1fanger
      @1fanger Před 10 lety

      Thanks

  • @airport4173
    @airport4173 Před 7 lety

    i fitted a stihl points type ignition plate in an old echo saw... got NO SPARK until turning in wrong direction and then big blue spark.....checked position of strongest magnet and cut a keyway to get magnet leaving 2nd armature end as points open.... now sparks but weaker. strange as the stihl was anticlockwise rotation and echo is anticlockwise rotation....

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 7 lety

      I've swapped non-points Echo trimmer coil into a old points Poulan saw and it fired right up and I use it still. I know that the position of the magnets can be either North inwards/South outwards or South inwards/North outwards. If the coil is setup to pull off of North and it is in the inward position, it is like having a 3/4in flywheel to coil gap, which will give a weak spark. Briggs and Stratton had issues when they went from points to breakerless and flipped the polarity of the magnets in the flywheel. Customers were so mad they offered to repolarize the flywheel for free so people could put breakerless coils on their points machines. Later they switched back to the standard they were using before.

  • @mickblackmore290
    @mickblackmore290 Před 5 lety

    do you know approximate resistance of the coil of an 8hp Tecumseh thats in a snapper rear eng mower?

    • @funnystuff5492
      @funnystuff5492 Před 5 lety

      The hardest part is resisting the urge to throw that piece of shit in the garbage and going and getting yourself a good old reliable Briggs.

  • @tonymacdonald2870
    @tonymacdonald2870 Před 10 lety

    Thanks for helping me understand watt going on. I do like to know watt happens. It's all good stuff.

  • @championbeam4018
    @championbeam4018 Před 2 lety

    I have a small engine with this, and I get power to the top of the plug, but no spark. I put the plug in another engine and it has spark. I cleaned the points and the coil seems to be working (idk how he tested it). What would anybody suggest?

  • @scottandrew2066
    @scottandrew2066 Před 5 lety

    Excellent explanation - I’m confused at how grounding the primary circuit stops production magnetism since the fly wheel is still spinning wouldn’t the voltage still be induced into the primary? Current would flow from the grounded primary to the other side of the primary completing a circuit. I know clearly I’m wrong I just don’t understand.
    I want to add, I don’t think the magnets on the fly wheel need to have both positive and negative polarities, if we look at a coil pack on modern engines they use the 12VDC from the battery to operate. All we need is a magnetic spinning on the flywheel to cut flux into the primary coil.
    Grounding the secondary makes perfect sense to shunt the spark back to the coil but also raises another question - when doing so wouldn’t the current from shorting to ground be high due to the voltage being extremely high? I would think the secondary’s coil would short out.

    • @frankdavidson9675
      @frankdavidson9675 Před rokem

      if primary coil is gd. there is no current flow even tho wheel is spinning you can not have voltage and gd at the same time

  • @jamaicangardener8523
    @jamaicangardener8523 Před 6 lety

    Great vid

  • @stuszith
    @stuszith Před 10 lety

    Sehr Gut!!! great teaching video -- I could Not have done any better!!!

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 10 lety

      Danke. I'm glad you liked it.

    • @stuszith
      @stuszith Před 10 lety

      NEXT lets do How a inductive (HEI) type of IGNITION CIrcuit functions????

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 10 lety

      Magic.. :)

  • @GoFindTreasure
    @GoFindTreasure Před 6 lety

    Thanks!!

  • @murraylowe8677
    @murraylowe8677 Před 8 lety

    Too wonderful in your detailing. But I am still having difficulty of no spark in a very old Kohler engine Cleaned the points but still no spark not sure of condenser but as you say they rarely go. I must still have a bad condenser.

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 8 lety

      The condensers do go bad, just not as often as the point contacts. If a quick clean of the points doesn't restore points, I generally put a new condenser in.

    • @DP-hy4vh
      @DP-hy4vh Před 6 lety

      Check to make sure the wire between the primary and the condenser is not shorted out against the engine block.
      Sometimes if the wire accidently touches the hot engine block, the insulation melts and causes a short circuit that prevents the coil from charging the condenser.
      Found this out the other day when replacing a condenser on an old Montgomery Ward generator.

  • @damontellegen3569
    @damontellegen3569 Před 4 lety

    Thank you

  • @nickwashburn723
    @nickwashburn723 Před 7 lety +2

    "magnetical" love it

  • @reneortiz2033
    @reneortiz2033 Před 7 lety

    what r symptoms of weak spark I have a old Neptune Outboard it don't wanna jump the spark across the spark pulg but when I hold the spark plug wire with my hand to ground I get a shock

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 7 lety

      More than likely the point contacts are dirty or the condensor is weak/dead.

    • @reneortiz2033
      @reneortiz2033 Před 7 lety

      sixtyfiveford I cleaned the points so it probably the condenser like u said ima just replace them both thank for the tips an reply grate video by the way

  • @vicmon25mon85
    @vicmon25mon85 Před 6 lety

    Hello sixtyfiveford@@@ I was wondering if you can help me with my problem I have a ruggerini small engine that it's working but the condenser it's about to run out due to the wire it's coming a parts from it, I was wondering if all the condensers works the same because I just can't find the condenser for this engine please help

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 6 lety +1

      I've swapped condensors from other engines and they all seam to work the same. I've picked ones that are virtually the same size.

    • @vicmon25mon85
      @vicmon25mon85 Před 6 lety

      sixtyfiveford thanks alot for sharing this with me I was just wondering because I have one new setting there so it's the one should be doing the job next

  • @farmitecture2060
    @farmitecture2060 Před 8 lety

    Thanks for sharing this video! So if I'm seeing a bright spark at the points when my Koler K321 is turning over should I assume the condenser is bad?

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 8 lety

      +Farmitecture Yes, if you're getting no spark at the plug. A few random sparks at the points is normal but not all the time.

    • @farmitecture2060
      @farmitecture2060 Před 8 lety

      +sixtyfiveford Thanks for your quick response! I am getting spark at the plug and a constant spark at the points. The motor does start but won't stay running at low idle unless I open the points all the way but then it won't keep running at fast idle it skips and misses and eventually stalls. When I set the points to max (they are only supposed to be .020 for this K321) I get a brighter spark both at the points and the plug maybe that's why it stays running then? Any thoughts?

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 8 lety

      Personally it sounds more like carb problems. A weak ignition system will falter at high rpms but generally works fine at idle.

    • @farmitecture2060
      @farmitecture2060 Před 8 lety

      I have rebuilt the carb and adjusted it to the manual and them some to try and keep it running when I set the points to .020. If I set the points to full open It idles great at low rpm but won't run smooth at high rpms. Thank you for you thoughts!

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 8 lety

      If the carb is good, you're on the right track with the condensor.

  • @BaldurKhr
    @BaldurKhr Před 4 lety

    Great explanation! Thanks!
    In order to obtain a very HIGH VOLTAGE in the secondary, we need a GREAT FLUX CHANGE through the core (implicitly secondary coil), because the greater the flux change the greater the voltage obtained. Therefore, besides collapsing the flux in the primary, we ALSO REVERSE the current direction through it, obtaining a GREATER FLUX DECAY through the primary, and this is exactly what the capacitor does. A capacitor always opposes a build up in voltage by charging itself. The contactor circuit here shortens both the primary coil and the capacitor. The capacitor opposes the build up of the induced voltage in the primary by charging up, and immediately after the circuit opens (10 degrees after Neutral, EGAP), the capacitor is no longer shortened by the contactor, so it discharges solely through the primary coil.
    Keep in mind, that any collapsing magnetic field through a coil, give rise to a self induced current through that coil. In our case, the self induced current due to the collapsing magnetic field is opposed by the capacitor current through the primary, thus hurrying up the collapse (according to the Right-Hand Corkscrew Rule) !
    In other words, the capacitor only forces a reversed current through the primary, to oppose the selfinduced one, in the end accelerating the collapse of the induced magnetic field. This happens very quickly, right after 10 degrees past Neutral (EGAP).
    At this point, the CHANGE of the rotor magnetic field in the core is just below peak value, which means the EMFs generated in both the primary and secondary coils are just below maximum. Also, the CHANGES in the rotor magnetic field and the collapsing primary field have the same directions (very important)! As the two magnetic fields have the same direction of change, they will superimpose, thus give rise to a LARGE FLUX CHANGE through the core, implicitly through the secondary coil. This is like a spike in the magnetic flux change through it, leading to a very high EMF at the ends of the secondary, which translates in a spark obtained at the sparkplug.
    Moreover the capacitor and primary coil form a tuned LC circuit.
    All this starts when the EGAP commences and up to the point when N reaches the yoke (Full Register position), the superimposed flux change being large enough to create the spark.
    czcams.com/video/OMLSNwQiiKg/video.html

  • @TexarJJF
    @TexarJJF Před 3 lety

    Hello, I was very pleased with your explanation on how dynamo ignition works, didn't have a clue until viewing your videao. Maybe a stupid question but I'm wondering, how high should the secondary voltage (feeding the spark plug) be? Would that be like hundreds- or thousands of volts? Up until now, haven't risked to test it.... maybe for the best..... Kind regards, Jacques Belgium. So as you can see you've got viewers all over the world although Belgium is a small European Country.

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 3 lety

      I would guess it to be around 10,000-20,000 volts.

    • @philhugill8458
      @philhugill8458 Před 7 měsíci

      Hey....I love your comment and maybe you could explain 8 HP Begium Horses vs 8 HP Harbor Freight engines.

  • @rltkktlr
    @rltkktlr Před 3 lety

    Hi great video. Wondering if anyone can help me. Kohler 8hp K181
    . Replaced coil, still no spark. I am thinking I probably should have ordered a condenser also. By the way only way for me to find parts is EBay, straight from China of course so just hoping they are good. Anyway in Checking the condenser, I am on 20k ohm setting, Red probe to wire, black too body, meter just stays at 1, should I not see a certain ohm reading, meaning I am charging the condenser? Also I would then check dc volts I believe, what am I looking for MV of something , then voltage should drop? Thanks for any help.

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 3 lety

      The condensor needs to be disconnected to test and should read around 30mfd from the body to the nipple. The coil is very very rarely the issue in lack of spark instances and generally dirty points, followed by failed condensor are the issue.

    • @rltkktlr
      @rltkktlr Před 3 lety

      sixtyfiveford hey thanks so much for getting back to me. In my case a new coil fixed my no spark, but back to my original problem I had before loosing spark. For a couple years now I have been having the same thing. Runs great for anywhere from 15min to an hour then starts running rough. Let it cool and starts the same process. I just put on a spark tester and spark looks intermittent when running rough. I took a video but not sure if I can attach it. Could that be a condenser? I have ordered one don’t have it yet.

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 3 lety

      @@rltkktlr Absolutely I would replace the condensor. It is a wear item and over time won't hold the spark energy needed to collapse the field and create a spark.

    • @rltkktlr
      @rltkktlr Před 3 lety

      sixtyfiveford thanks, I should have ordered one with coil. Will let you know the outcome. Great channel by the way

    • @rltkktlr
      @rltkktlr Před 3 lety

      sixtyfiveford ok got the parts, points and condenser, replace condenser, I certainly would have replaced the points but got lazy, it’s on a walk(push hard) behind leaf blower and blower would have had to come off get to points. Maybe a 1 inch screwdriver which I don’t have. So anyway condenser didn’t fix it so I threw in the towel bought a electronic conversion chip, $30, very easy to install, no more points and condenser, and great spark and runs great. Thanks again, great channel you have.

  • @mon0railbredpig
    @mon0railbredpig Před 9 lety

    If the contacts close every rotation of the crank, does that mean the spark fires on both the Intake and Combustion cycle?

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 9 lety

      mon0railbredpig Yes.

    • @thebaron44
      @thebaron44 Před 9 lety

      mon0railbredpig Yes the plug fires every intake/compression cycle and exhaust cycle but this has no ill effect, in fact it has no effect during the exhaust because there is nothing to burn.

  • @gato771000
    @gato771000 Před 10 lety

    nice video I just start working on small engines I pick a 12 hp Tecumseh with points in the side of the block and condenser beside the coil and am just getting really weak spark because somebody pull all the wire from the points will appreciate some help

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 10 lety

      Weak spark will either be dirty points or possibly a failing condenser.

    • @gato771000
      @gato771000 Před 10 lety

      thanks I think condense is bad

  • @scottsc63edwards86
    @scottsc63edwards86 Před 5 lety

    Don’t need North and south poles on flywheel only one polarity. When the magnet passes the magnetic field collapses and induces a voltage to secondary weather AC or DC it’s the same. Grounding the primary should not cause the spark to open, if so please explain the path for current.

    • @Exnay777
      @Exnay777 Před 2 lety

      Btw, every magnet has a N and S pole, every magnet...it's the nature of the physics! Lol

  • @ItsaboutMakingnotBuying
    @ItsaboutMakingnotBuying Před 10 lety

    What should be the distance between the fly wheel and the transformer? Should it be a couple a thousand or touching it? Thank you. Good explanation.

  • @Mike-su8si
    @Mike-su8si Před 3 lety

    My spark advance module plugs to the second prong

  • @mrsmilly12345
    @mrsmilly12345 Před 8 lety

    I have to ask I have a vintage dirt bike and I just replaced the points and condenser and it's still sparking at the points when not running so do you know what the issue is?
    Thanks

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 8 lety

      +Simon De Asian Sounds like a bad condenser.

    • @mrsmilly12345
      @mrsmilly12345 Před 8 lety

      +sixtyfiveford
      I checked that and changed the condenser and points so I'm not sure the book says it should read 5.9 ohms at the coil (spark plug) but I'm reading 10.25 ohms I'm not sure if they add up or not

    • @mrsmilly12345
      @mrsmilly12345 Před 8 lety

      +sixtyfiveford does this mean including the boot for the spark plug? The boot reads 4.9ohms and the end of the coil (no boot) I got 5.2(something)

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 8 lety

      The condensor is responsible for stopping the points from sparking. I'm assuming you old one was toast?

  • @conwald1
    @conwald1 Před 9 lety

    I just bought a used Toro groundmaster 52(1979) it was running well and cut beautifully. It died while I had been cutting for about 1.5. It will turn over, but no spark. Have changed the armature, did as instructed on your video re condenser and point, checked to see if any wires in harness broken extra, but still no consistant spark, only once in a blue moon. Any ideas. Seat kill switch as been bypassed.. thxs

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 9 lety

      conwald1 This is the point system you have czcams.com/video/QQqhvA5qo2c/video.html . You can pull the kill wire all together to make sure it's not grounding out.

    • @conwald1
      @conwald1 Před 9 lety

      sixtyfiveford Mine is screwed, if you take off the kill swich, it will not turn over.. hook it back up, it will turn over. So something is wired backwards. Trying to find a new points and condensor, having a hard time. Looking at maybe the solonoid.

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 9 lety

      The points and condensor are easily obtainable from hundreds of online places. Don't search for them under Toro as they have nothing to due with Briggs and Stratton. The wire going from the coil to the points needs to stay in order to run, but the wire running from the points the tractor can be pulled off to test(kill wire). If you're getting intermittent spark more than likely you just need to sand the points with a very fine sand paper.

    • @conwald1
      @conwald1 Před 9 lety

      sixtyfiveford this is the problem, its backwards on our tractor. When we disconnect the wire from the points to the tractor it will not run. It will not even turn over, its absolutely dead. Connect it again and it cranks. Go figure. We are totally baffled.

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 9 lety

      Let me explain a little more clearly as I may have misdirected you a little. There are 2 wires coming from under the flywheel going to the coil. One goes to the points and the other comes out and is next to this wire but never touches the points. This is your kill wire and will go up into the loom to the ignition switch and all your safety kill wires touch this single wire. This is the only way the ignition is shorted out. You can simply unplug or temporarily cut this wire to eliminate the possibility the safety switches on the mower aren't killing it.

  • @cevdettemucin8643
    @cevdettemucin8643 Před 3 lety

    Thanks

  • @angiefinlay6970
    @angiefinlay6970 Před 9 lety

    Thanks for the video, I cant wait to get home and show my husband how to trouble shoot this!

  • @berniemac8413
    @berniemac8413 Před 3 lety

    Great video! How do you figure out if a condenser is still any good?

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 3 lety

      You can use a capacitance tester to test the mfd. However most people don't have one of those so, in that case it's easiest to just replace the condenser if it is over 10years old(though I have seen them go 40+ years without issue)

    • @berniemac8413
      @berniemac8413 Před 3 lety

      @@sixtyfiveford hmmmm. I have a mcculloch eager beaver top handle chainsaw.. spark isn’t the greatest so it doesn’t start. I’m thinking it’s due to the condenser/capacitor. My multimeter read 1 microfarad but I’m not sure if it’s within spec as the capacitor doesn’t have any labeling on it.. I did read online that most chainsaw capacitors read .22mfd. If that info is correct, mine is wayyyyy out of spec! Would getting a condenser designed for cars and similar in size work? Trying to avoid paying the $30 for an old brand name McCulloch condenser when I can just pay a few bucks for a generic brand from the auto parts store..

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 3 lety

      @@berniemac8413 I have swapped condensers many times. Most of the time I use the cheapest Briggs and Stratton ones but they might not fit into a chainsaw. But have never had an issue swapping them around.

    • @berniemac8413
      @berniemac8413 Před 3 lety

      @@sixtyfiveford thank you for your input! I will look for lawn mower ones!

  • @mikefrance1846
    @mikefrance1846 Před 7 lety

    have outboard motor. won't start. if condenser is gone will I still get any bit of spark

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 7 lety

      If the condensor is bad, you shouldn't get any spark.

    • @mikefrance1846
      @mikefrance1846 Před 7 lety

      +sixtyfiveford . I have an suzuki dt 7.5 outboard motor. I've loads of petrol and compression and some spark. I've put new points and reed valves and two new original plugs. still won't start. any ideas.

    • @sixtyfiveford
      @sixtyfiveford  Před 7 lety

      You should be able to run a spark test and get the spark to jump a 1/4" gap. This will ensure a strong enough spark to run. 2 strokes are easily flooded with too much fuel, to clear the fuel, pull it over a few dozen times with the plugs removed(choke off full throttle).

  • @daylightintheswamp9315

    When the points are closed and the electricity is "flowing out" Where does it go? Just to ground?

  • @teksight9714
    @teksight9714 Před 7 měsíci

    Very complicated. How did anyone think of points and condensers?