bertsmobile1
Lawn Royalty
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2014
- Threads
- 65
- Messages
- 24,995
Only in so much as reinsuring you that "Hall Effect Sensors" are not some sort of voodoo electronic magic.
Some repair manuals do have resistance readings, usually only for the secondary side ( coil leg to spark plug ) however these specifically apply to the specific meter made specifically for that brand of engine, not something bought from Harbour Freight.
But 1/2 witts read the numbers and type them into their presentations with no understanding about what they mean, or even worse will flip through a manual, see specks for a coil with a remote control unit and quote these with great authority.
Then there are special testing machines that read the actual pattern of the generated spark, its out put & duration.
They cost near $ 20,000 and usually need a known good coil for calibration so again, the industry standard is to replace with a known good one.
Easy for me I just grab a new one off the shelf hook it up, gap it too wide ( 0.020" ) and check for a spark. If I get one regap to 0.010" and give it back to the customer.
I use an inline spark tester ( red neon tube type ) and can tell from the intensity of the glow what is going on.
A good coil under a good magnet will make a strong spark when at the far end of its mounts ~ .150" to .250" or if using a 3 point tester, throw a 1/2" spark once the engine gets up to speed.
The wrong magneto module will not generate a spark or generate a weak spark.
Because the spark is made by a rotating magnet, it can be a + or a - spark depending which way the magnet is.
A module made for a N-S magnet rotation will not work properly on a flywheel with a S-N magnet rotation and then there are magnets that are mounted radially so they just have N or S pole pointing at the magneto module.
Because they are so fragile, most retailers will not take them back & I am the same.
I fit & test one for free, if the mower is supplied stripped ready for instalation but will not take a claimed DOA module back.
Anyone who will happily do that would be suspected of flogging off known iffy modules.
If you want to do your repair n the cheap then you are better off going to small ( Mar & Par ) repair shop and ask them for a 2nd hand coil.
make sure you have the full engine number, including the serial section with you because Briggs change specks , as of engine number ??????.
Some repair manuals do have resistance readings, usually only for the secondary side ( coil leg to spark plug ) however these specifically apply to the specific meter made specifically for that brand of engine, not something bought from Harbour Freight.
But 1/2 witts read the numbers and type them into their presentations with no understanding about what they mean, or even worse will flip through a manual, see specks for a coil with a remote control unit and quote these with great authority.
Then there are special testing machines that read the actual pattern of the generated spark, its out put & duration.
They cost near $ 20,000 and usually need a known good coil for calibration so again, the industry standard is to replace with a known good one.
Easy for me I just grab a new one off the shelf hook it up, gap it too wide ( 0.020" ) and check for a spark. If I get one regap to 0.010" and give it back to the customer.
I use an inline spark tester ( red neon tube type ) and can tell from the intensity of the glow what is going on.
A good coil under a good magnet will make a strong spark when at the far end of its mounts ~ .150" to .250" or if using a 3 point tester, throw a 1/2" spark once the engine gets up to speed.
The wrong magneto module will not generate a spark or generate a weak spark.
Because the spark is made by a rotating magnet, it can be a + or a - spark depending which way the magnet is.
A module made for a N-S magnet rotation will not work properly on a flywheel with a S-N magnet rotation and then there are magnets that are mounted radially so they just have N or S pole pointing at the magneto module.
Because they are so fragile, most retailers will not take them back & I am the same.
I fit & test one for free, if the mower is supplied stripped ready for instalation but will not take a claimed DOA module back.
Anyone who will happily do that would be suspected of flogging off known iffy modules.
If you want to do your repair n the cheap then you are better off going to small ( Mar & Par ) repair shop and ask them for a 2nd hand coil.
make sure you have the full engine number, including the serial section with you because Briggs change specks , as of engine number ??????.