Dual Ignition Coil Resistance Test

scout-j-m

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Jul 31, 2009
Messages
636
Recently purchased a 1986 Yamaha 25hp, model 25SJ. Am having issues with very weak spark. I found some specs online and began testing the resistance of various parts of the ignition system. Everything checked out until I got to the ignition coil. This model has the dual ignition coil like in the attached picture. I tested the primary resistance across the orange and black wires that connect to the CDI box and got 0.4 ohms which seems acceptable. I tested the secondary resistance by touching the leads to one plug wire and the other to the orange wire. I got nothing on my meter when touching either plug wire. I then swapped my other lead to the black wire and tried both plug wires again and still nothing. I can't see how I would be doing it wrong - there are only so many possible combinations here lol. Am I missing something or is the ignition coil shot? For what its worth I questioned whether or not my multimeter was working correctly for higher resistance so I checked the coil on my 15hp Johnson and got 260 ohms which is within spec.
 

Attachments

  • photo326839.jpg
    photo326839.jpg
    18.9 KB · Views: 2

GA_Boater

Honorary Moderator Emeritus
Joined
May 24, 2011
Messages
49,038
You can't test a coil that way. The orange and black wires each go to a primary winding inside with other ends of the windings connect to ground. The same for plug wires attached to secondary windings and the other ends tied to ground. There is no physical connection between primary and secondary winds, so you won't get a reading.

What you measured between the O and B wires is the resistance of both primary windings. Measure between the two plug wires for resistance of both secondary windings. To check individual primary or secondary coils, measure from a wire and ground or one of the mounting rings. It's possible the primary is grounded to one mounting ring and the primary to the other ring.


Is your 15 HP motor a single or dual coil?
 

scout-j-m

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Jul 31, 2009
Messages
636
Thanks. Yes the 15hp is a normal, single coil. This is the first time I have ever messed with a dual coil like this.

I did not consider that the mounting bolts could be the ground and that both black and orange wires were primary leads. I guess since one was black instead of another color helped make my assumption and off I went. I'll recheck and update. Thanks again.
 

scout-j-m

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Jul 31, 2009
Messages
636
I pulled the coil and bench tested it. The image below is my coil and I numbered the 4 leads and the 2 post attachments.

1 to 2: 0.4 ohms
1 to 3: no reading
1 to 4: no reading
3 to 4: 5 ohms
5 to 6: no reading
5 to 1/2/3/4: no reading
5 to 1/2/3/4: no reading

When I pulled it, I noticed the orange wire is burned through exposing the wires. This matches up with the story the head tells in that it was seriously overheated at some time to the point where the paint was entirely burned off. The thermostat was also stuck open and the stem had broken. The burned wire must have been on the head. The burned wire must be what was causing the audible electrical clicking I was hearing as I was trying to pull start it.

Is it true what I read elsewhere that with these dual coils both cylinders fire simultaneously, with one being a wasted spark while that cylinder is a BDC?
 

Attachments

  • photo326853.jpg
    photo326853.jpg
    1.4 MB · Views: 1

scout-j-m

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Jul 31, 2009
Messages
636
The pics below are all I have found. Looks to be taken from some Clymer type manual.

I saw that coil as well. Im always a little reluctant to buy non-OEM electrical parts but at over $125 for a coil, this is probably worth a shot for sure.

I'm going to repair the orange wire and reinstall and see what it does. Then test the CDI per the attached image's checks. Will likely buy the coil you linked if the CDI checks out. If CDI shows bad too I may dig into it some more.
 

Attachments

  • photo326855.jpg
    photo326855.jpg
    182 KB · Views: 9
  • photo326863.jpg
    photo326863.jpg
    722.8 KB · Views: 10

scout-j-m

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Jul 31, 2009
Messages
636
Im going to refrain from doing any more as I am not 100% confident in my multimeter right now. I tested all 3 coils on my Yamaha 30 per the factory service manual and all showed open on the secondary coil resistance but it runs like a champ. Ill pick up a new meter as soon as I can.
 

GA_Boater

Honorary Moderator Emeritus
Joined
May 24, 2011
Messages
49,038
If the 30 HP coil is the same, try swapping if the wire repair doesn't fix it.
 

scout-j-m

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Jul 31, 2009
Messages
636
I pulled the coil and bench tested it. The image below is my coil and I numbered the 4 leads and the 2 post attachments.

1 to 2: 0.4 ohms
1 to 3: no reading
1 to 4: no reading
3 to 4: 5 ohms
5 to 6: no reading
5 to 1/2/3/4: no reading
5 to 1/2/3/4: no reading

When I pulled it, I noticed the orange wire is burned through exposing the wires. This matches up with the story the head tells in that it was seriously overheated at some time to the point where the paint was entirely burned off. The thermostat was also stuck open and the stem had broken. The burned wire must have been on the head. The burned wire must be what was causing the audible electrical clicking I was hearing as I was trying to pull start it.

Is it true what I read elsewhere that with these dual coils both cylinders fire simultaneously, with one being a wasted spark while that cylinder is a BDC?

Update to this.... I am now getting 3300 ohms between the spark plug leads (#5 and #6). The spec I found said secondary resistance should be 3000-4000ohms. All the others I originally measured as open still show open. Starting to think the coil may not be the issue now (aside from the burnt wire which I temporarily taped up while troubleshooting.
 

scout-j-m

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Jul 31, 2009
Messages
636
I also checked the CDI per the image I attached above and pretty much everything read open. Only time I got any resistance was when connecting the ground to the brown wire and the black wire that goes to the coil.
 

GA_Boater

Honorary Moderator Emeritus
Joined
May 24, 2011
Messages
49,038
I don't know if this would make any difference, but bolt the coil back on motor if you haven't. Then you know it has a good ground to use for readings.
 

scout-j-m

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Jul 31, 2009
Messages
636
I don't know if this would make any difference, but bolt the coil back on motor if you haven't. Then you know it has a good ground to use for readings.

Will try that. I'm pretty sure the pulser and charge coils under the flywheel are good as they have resistance in spec. I also noticed when testing them that the grounds are good since instead of measuring from red/white to black and brown to black I also went straight to the ground that CDI uses instead of the black and got the same readings.

One other thing possibly worth mentioning is that there is spark currently, it is just super weak and takes a crazy hard yank on the rope to get it. My past experiences with a bad CDI has always been acceptable spark or no spark at all - never a case of a weak spark. I always just associate weak spark with a coil issue, be it a bad ground or melted coil.
 

scout-j-m

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Jul 31, 2009
Messages
636
I bought a used CDI off ebay and installed it yesterday shortly after it arrived. It is now jumping a 3/4" gap with a nice thick, blue, snappy spark. I am going to run it in a barrel today and see how it does. If it appears to be fixed I will double check the timing settings, adjust the idle mixture screw, and then take that burnt wire on the coil and add some solder to the bare wire and cover with some heat shrink. Will replace the coil in the near future but will see how it performs for a few trips before doing so.
 
Last edited:

GA_Boater

Honorary Moderator Emeritus
Joined
May 24, 2011
Messages
49,038
I love my old school magneto ignition. :smile:

Got my fingers crossed for you, Scout. Go boating and catch some fish.

Stay safe out there!
 

scout-j-m

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Jul 31, 2009
Messages
636
Final update - the motor is running now. Have it idling somewhat smoothly at 750 rpms in forward gear. May take some tweaking as the mixture screw is very rich at about 2.5 turns out but should be good enough for a lake test. Gonna initially mix the fuel a little rich at 40:1 sand take it easy for a good bit before opening it up since I think this motor may have been overheated before it sat up but feel pretty confident about it.

Also thought I would mention, this is a wasted spark motor. I initially used my 4 stroke timing light to try to set it but was seeing about 3200 rpms in forward idle....on a timing you would divide the the rpms in half for a regular 2 stroke but that was coming out to 1600 rpms. Since this is a wasted spark it really must be divided in half again which would be 800 rpms which is what it sounded like. I finally put on a Hardline tach and changed the setting to 2 pulses per revolution and it is reading correctly. Hope someone finds this tidbit helpful.
 

scout-j-m

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Jul 31, 2009
Messages
636
Uh oh, I just couldn't catch a break. Had some time so did a water test yesterday evening and had an issue. Motor started first pull and seemed to be running great, but once we slowly began accelerating there seemed to be a slight miss just above a fast idle which did smooth out and then it accelerated to 10-12 mph at ~3000 rpms and wouldn't do any more than that. Once any more throttle was given it would go from smooth to sounding like it was missing and shaking.

I did a few things on the water after it did this. I checked the bulb and it was very firm. I checked the tank vent and it was open. I removed the cowl and inspected the fuel filter bowl and it was pretty clean and full of fuel with no air bubbles, both at idle and WOT. I tried pumping the bulb at WOT and it was still hard and even when squeezed very hard made no difference. I looked down the carb throat at WOT and there was a very significant amount of fuel coming out of the main nozzle. While at WOT I pulled the choke and it reduced the rpms drastically and choked out the engine like you would expect it to do on a nicely running motor.

Last night, I removed and broke down the fuel pump to find it was in great shape from gaskets, to check valves, to the diaphragm. Also rechecked spark and was still showing excellent. Retested the ignition coil resistance and it was still in spec. The electrical tape I added to the bare spot was still in place as well. I put the top piston at TDC and the timing mark was aligned with the TDC pointer and when statically advancing the throttle it was showing 25 BTDC which is the spec. Both plugs were a little dark but not terrible. I did run it at 2-3k rpms back to the ramp where it does run well so that may have cleaned them off some.

Any thoughts? I'm leaning towards it not being fuel starvation based on my on the water tests. I was thinking it may have been the fuel pump leaking extra fuel into the crankcase but that doesn't seem to be it either. The only other fuel issue I can think of is that the main jet was boogered up a bit from where a previous person used a poorly sized tool to remove it so its possible somebody decided to drill it out too. I still need to recheck compression but now I feel like Ive come back to the ignition system as to me it seems like it is misfiring or having weak spark at the high side rpms.
 

scout-j-m

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Jul 31, 2009
Messages
636
Forgot to add, the boat is a 1542 Fisher semi-v. Same boat with two people and same gear in same locations does 21-22 mph with a mid 80's 15hp Evinrude. So I don't think weight distribution, setup, ect is a factor here.
 
Top