You are referring to the shift interrupt switch. It grounds the ignition system momentarily so the drive can be shifted out of gear into neutral. Yes, if the switch is activated the ignition system will not workAnother thing that was an issue is the neutral cutout switch, mounted right on top of my valve cover. It was stuck closed no matter what gear position. I removed it and got it to free up, but obviously needs cleaned.
I don’t really understand what this switch is doing. It’s obviously shorting something out when the button is depressed but I’m not sure exactly what. Would this also hinder spark from firing if the button was depressed?
Great explanation Chris, thanks. I’m an electrical engineer by trade, but obviously lack the “common sense” aspect of these older engines. Luckily I have some good news and I’ve learned a ton today.OK, really briefly. (Ignitions 101)
Consider it as 2 circuits, the low tension (12v) side, and the high tension side (20,000v+).
The LT side consists of (in order) the battery, the ignition switch, a ballast resistor or resistive wire, the coil, the points and condenser. (The condenser just suppresses the small arc generated across the points as they open, reducing points burn).
When the points are closed, current flows in the LT circuit and 'charges up' the primary winding in the coil (actually creates a magnetic field inside the coil). When the points open that magnetic field collapses, which induces a voltage spike, of around 400v (hence the small arc that tries to jump the points). That's the LT side dealt with....
As that 400v is induced in the coil primary winding it's stepped up to around 20,000v in the secondary of the coil. The coil is nothing more than a simple transformer. That 20KV then travels along the HT lead coming out of the top of the coil to the centre HT post of the distributor cap, where it travels along the rotor to one of the side posts in the dissy cap, along that lead to the spark plug attached to the other end...
Hope that helps.
Chris.......
There’s a fuel filter on the carb assembly itself? I was under the impression the only filter is at the bottom end of the fuel pump.Check the fuel filter on the carb inlet. It could be buggered up.
Usually mounted on the engine itself small 1/2 qt translucent bottle. I didn't see one in your picture of your engine. Most Gen one drives (88 vintage) do not have one. Just open the drain and then vent plugs, when empty fill from bottom, when full put vent plug back in before removing's lube pump from bottomAnother thing I need to get taken care of is changing the lower unit oil. The process looks pretty straightforward, but the one thing I need to identify is if my drive has an external reservoir or not. Are these usually located around the engine compartment area, if I do have one?
If on starting fluid you don't get it to cough I'd say you don't have spark or timing is off or no compressionI replaced the fuel pump and am pretty sure I’m getting fuel pressure now. However, still no start. It sputters on starting fluid. No attempt to even fire while cranking regularly.
1: the filter at the carb looks clean but there was no spring in that assembly. Is this an issue? (Pic attached)
2: does the operation of the carb and linkages look normal here? (Vid attached)
disconnect it and test 5 ohms is a lot of resistance but could ground out the ignitionAlso… my shift interrupt switch is reading 5 ohms across the terminals when the switch is NOT depressed. Could this contribute to a no-start condition? I think it should be an open (infinite resistance) when switch is not depressed, and a short when depressed.