Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > Toro CCR 2000, no spark from plug wire
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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Denny
Joined: Dec 12, 2007
Points: 7
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Toro CCR 2000, no spark from plug wire
Original Message Dec 12, 2007 8:14 pm |
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I turned the key on and have no spark from the plug or even the plug wire when turning over the engine How do I know if it is the coil magneto or the xstar module magneto? It is a model 38180
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broncman
Joined: Jan 14, 2012
Points: 17
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Re: Toro CCR 2000, no spark from plug wire
Reply #38 Jan 16, 2012 12:14 am |
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Photo 1 did not load but it shows I am getting continuity from the iron core to the primary wire which connects to the module.
This message was modified Jan 16, 2012 by broncman
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trouts2
Location: Marlboro MA
Joined: Dec 8, 2007
Points: 1328
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Re: Toro CCR 2000, no spark from plug wire
Reply #39 Jan 16, 2012 9:38 am |
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Brocman, I please excuse some mis-information above. Here's the corrections: 1. Your coil has a primary and secondary. The secondary is also the kill wire. 2. The spark plug end and the secondary ends outside run internally through coils the other side of which go to ground. 3. The resistance on the secondary to any ground should be .8 to 1.1 ohms. 4. The resistance on the primary to any ground should be 5800 to 7940 ohms. You had been checking from primary to the spark plug which is a short test. Do the above two tests on both coils and see what you get for values. You posted above that you put in the MegaFire "to replace the original". The 38180 did come with an XStar module. Your 381185 did not. It had points. ?? Confused by that. Comparing the MegaFire to XStar. The XStar module bolted to ground and had one lead which runs to the secondary/kill wire of the coil. So it's a module with one lead that connects to the primary. The MegaFire and other generic modeuls areabout the same. They have a couple of leads so it can be connected to a positive or negative grounded system. Not a big deal. Depending on the ground one of the module tabs gets wired to ground. With one tab wire connected to ground that leaves one tab wire and that one is connected just like an XStar. The picture of the Rotary module setup is good for the MegaFire II. Flywheels and magnet count: The 38180 was made to have an electronic module. Your 38185 was not. The flywheels are different part numbers. You say yours had three magnets and Denny said his had three. The XStar was meant to run with three magnets. MegaFire says not to use their module with multi magnet flywheels but guys do that and they work. Yours may work or it may have blown your coil although I doubt it did. I'd guess your second coil is good. I'd retest both coils on the machine. Connect the coil and points up without the MegaFire and turn the flywheel magnets sharply past the coil and check for spark. I put my finger on the sparkplug cap end to ground and feel for a spark. Wash your finger first as there may be enough dirt to block flow. Check both your coils. If you get spark then connect up the MegaFire without going through the stop switch and you should be ok. If that works wire in the stop switch.
This message was modified Jan 16, 2012 by trouts2
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broncman
Joined: Jan 14, 2012
Points: 17
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Re: Toro CCR 2000, no spark from plug wire
Reply #42 Jan 17, 2012 12:05 am |
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Thank you guys for all your input! This dog gone thing has become somewhat of a quest. Like I said earlier, I hate to throw away a good machine. I have seen a coil/module combo on ebay for about $75. That would be my final effort. Here is the latest that I have done. As I stated, last week I bought a used coil. I also bought a mega fire II ignition module. The other day I installed everything and got good spark. I then put it all back together and it ran for 30 seconds and quit. Thats when I started posting on this forum. Following all these wonderful suggestions for you guys that have donated so much of your time, I carefully cleaned all connections real good. I took some fine emery paper and lightly sanded all areas that had electrical to metal connections. I also took some lacquer thinner and wiped all dirt and dielectric tune up grease I had applied to any connections. I did this thinking that it may have some how been forming some kind of barrier. I should re-iterate that the flywheel has 3 MAGNETS on it. Tonight I reinstalled everything and gaped the coil with the recommended business card. Wire was installed from coil to mega fire II ignition module. Wire then installed from ignition module to good ground. NO SWITCH WIRED IN AT THIS TIME. I then filed and cleaned an edge of an engine cooling fin to hold the spark plug against. I plugged in the electric starter and while holding the spark plug against the filed cooling fin, I got INTERMITTENT SPARK (although I did not get "zapped" when holding the plug wire). It would spark for a few seconds quite aggressively and then stop sparking. It sort of looked like a big thick spark. Sort of bigger than a normal spark you would see. Returning say five minutes later, it would spark again and then stop sparking. I have the plug gaped at about .030-.032. Unfortunately I do not know what to guess at this point. Perhaps the module. Since I am getting a real good spark now, I am leaning towards the module and not the coil. Could a coil throw an intermittent spark? Perhaps I should buy a different aftermarket module? Hopefully it posts, but below is a photo of the exact setup as removed from the engine of this 38185 sn 2001010. Notice the module in the photo. Brand new that baby goes for $125 +. This is the one I replaced with the mega fire II.
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niper99
Location: London Ont
Joined: Dec 2, 2007
Points: 354
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Re: Toro CCR 2000, no spark from plug wire
Reply #43 Jan 17, 2012 3:18 am |
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Thank you guys for all your input! This dog gone thing has become somewhat of a quest. Like I said earlier, I hate to throw away a good machine. I have seen a coil/module combo on ebay for about $75. That would be my final effort. Here is the latest that I have done. As I stated, last week I bought a used coil. I also bought a mega fire II ignition module. The other day I installed everything and got good spark. I then put it all back together and it ran for 30 seconds and quit. Thats when I started posting on this forum. Following all these wonderful suggestions for you guys that have donated so much of your time, I carefully cleaned all connections real good. I took some fine emery paper and lightly sanded all areas that had electrical to metal connections. I also took some lacquer thinner and wiped all dirt and dielectric tune up grease I had applied to any connections. I did this thinking that it may have some how been forming some kind of barrier. I should re-iterate that the flywheel has 3 MAGNETS on it. Tonight I reinstalled everything and gaped the coil with the recommended business card. Wire was installed from coil to mega fire II ignition module. Wire then installed from ignition module to good ground. NO SWITCH WIRED IN AT THIS TIME. I then filed and cleaned an edge of an engine cooling fin to hold the spark plug against. I plugged in the electric starter and while holding the spark plug against the filed cooling fin, I got INTERMITTENT SPARK (although I did not get "zapped" when holding the plug wire). It would spark for a few seconds quite aggressively and then stop sparking. It sort of looked like a big thick spark. Sort of bigger than a normal spark you would see. Returning say five minutes later, it would spark again and then stop sparking. I have the plug gaped at about .030-.032. Unfortunately I do not know what to guess at this point. Perhaps the module. Since I am getting a real good spark now, I am leaning towards the module and not the coil. Could a coil throw an intermittent spark? Perhaps I should buy a different aftermarket module? Hopefully it posts, but below is a photo of the exact setup as removed from the engine of this 38185 sn 2001010. Notice the module in the photo. Brand new that baby goes for $125 +. This is the one I replaced with the mega fire II. ok pictures are good:))..... with that setup in the picture its wired exactly the same way with the replacement module... so the wire coming from the coil goes to the POSTIVE side of the replacement module and of course the other goes to ground side... now personally i would NOT use a business card as a measuring tool becuase business cards vary in thickness alot...and lve repaired more than a few coils gaps being out of adjustment in the past from customers using business cards...i did one this summer that had a gap of .045.. customer said he was told to use a business to gap it... bad idea that machine would not start...all i did was re gap to .012 and it started right up.... so its important to get the right gap set.. set the gap at .010-.015..
as far as having spark then it stops is unusual...maybe your replacement module isnt working properely??...but first get the gap within spec..then if no change i would try another module..
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trouts2
Location: Marlboro MA
Joined: Dec 8, 2007
Points: 1328
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Re: Toro CCR 2000, no spark from plug wire
Reply #46 Jan 17, 2012 9:55 am |
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>>>Could a coil throw an intermittent spark? Yes. Can happend with a small open in the primary winding. >>>Perhaps I should buy a different aftermarket module? No. Without a reading from ground to the spark plug end of the coil other parts won't make any difference. The coil is defective. If a new module does then your meter is defective. The coil secondary is a single wire from the sparkplug end, wound many times around the iron core then to ground. The reading you should get from the sparkplug end to ground is 5800 to 7940 ohms. You get zero and intermittant spark. That indicates the coil is defective and has a break in the coil wire. Since your getting intermittant spark the spark is juming the open sometimes and sometimes it dosen't. That happens at times and not unusual. The induced voltage is very high and jumping an open not that difficult. A possibility that give the symptoms is a bad connection from the primary coil to the sprk plug hood.
This message was modified Jan 17, 2012 by trouts2
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