I am new to this forum and self-taught/new with outboard repairs. Last year I replaced both ignition coils on my Evinrude when I found that one cylinder wasn't firing (spark plugs were new and one was consistently not getting spark). After I replaced the coils (with BRP coils), both cylinders were firing and the motor worked great for about 2 months. Then the same cylinder seemed to quit (while running, I got shocked after touching the boot of the non-firing spark plug). I took the multi-meter to the motor this spring and found that the spark-plug leads were good, but both coils had output resistance that was below what I found posted for spec (supposed to be 200-400ohms but found one to be 12 ohms and the other, bad coil, to be 6 ohms). The resistance on the primaries for the coils seemed to be good (1.1 ohms each). I couldn't figure out how to test the trigger or stator on my model of Evinrude, but I found that when I switched the connections from the magneto to the coils, the same coil was consistently bad, which I believe means that the problem is isolated to the coil. And I should specify, the low coil resistances were measured when the coils were off the motor.
My questions are:
1) why would my new coil resistances be below spec?
2) why is one coil half the resistance of the other?
3) what would cause a new coil to die within a few months?
My questions are:
1) why would my new coil resistances be below spec?
2) why is one coil half the resistance of the other?
3) what would cause a new coil to die within a few months?
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