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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tomc585
Joined: Feb 16, 2012
Points: 5
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Re: Toro CCR 2000, no spark from plug wire
Reply #72 Mar 6, 2012 12:31 pm |
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Another success story here. After trying a used module (no known condition) I sprang for an ebay mega fire II ($18 shipped). Just spun it by hand a the spark was brighter then a super nova. Guess I'll be winterizing it and wait till next year. Looks like Long Island is getting an early spring. Thanks for the helpful info.
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micah68kj
Joined: Dec 1, 2012
Points: 1
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Re: Toro CCR 2000, no spark from plug wire
Reply #74 Dec 1, 2012 8:09 pm |
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Hello all, New to forum. Just joined. I want to thank you all for this forum and especially this particular thread. I bought one of these Toro CCR 2000 snow blowers from a guy on craigslist. It is a 1995 mdl 38180 w/ the Suzuki engine. It looks as if it has hardly been used. Not a speck of rust and the engine is extremely clean. It had a no fire issue. I got it for a really good price. I googled "Toro CCR 2000 no fire" and found this forum. I read about halfway through this thread and ordered a Mega Fire ll. Before I ordered it I just gave everything a kind of going over. I took the engine out and looked at the coil and set the air gap at 0.010. Kind of looked over the wires but I just knew there was nothing wrong there. Put the engine in a vise and fabbed a pull rope to see if it was doing anything. I felt a weak shock was all. Long story short I took the ignition module off and put the whole thing back together and waited for the new module. It came today and I had the snow blower running in just a few minutes. It started on the very first pull. Thanks again! Joe
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bignick
Joined: Dec 23, 2012
Points: 1
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Re: Toro CCR 2000, no spark from plug wire
Reply #76 Dec 23, 2012 6:40 pm |
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My Toro CCR 2000 worked great the first snow storm of the year, then a couple of weeks ago it wouldn't start. Frustrating is an understatement. It's snowing like crazy with over 8" down already, cold and blowing with no end in sight. I start taking the blower apart and can't get spark. I try a new plug and no cigar. I finally take the shrouding completely off, remove the gas tank pull starter assy and fan shroud. The flywheel magnets are strong and the air gap to the coil looks ok. I'm betting it's the module so I ordered one off Ebay for $17 shipped to my house. I quickly wired it up with neg ground and turned the crank cup by hand. I got a good spark so I assembled the whole thing back together. Filled it with gas and it started with the first pull. I'd like to thank those with previous posts for steering me in the right direction. As I recall motors using ignitions like these in the past used condensers and I believe the module serves this purpose. I'd bet a condenser may work just as well.
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RTR1
Joined: Jan 17, 2017
Points: 1
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Re: Toro CCR 2000, no spark from plug wire
Reply #77 Jan 17, 2017 8:35 pm |
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Thank you all for your input to this subject. I realize this is an old discussion, but the following is offered with the hope that it will help at least one other person.
My machine: CCR2000, Model # 38180, S/N 39_ _ _ _ _, 1993 vintage. Prices for parts varied by supplier, but here is a typical quote. Magneto Coil $213, Magneto Module $124.
I was experiencing the same issue (no spark) and found several good pointers in the responses herein. My experience:
I had checked the magneto coil's secondary and primary winding resistances with a digital auto ranging meter. Primary (low voltage) measured a 1.5 ohms. Secondary (high voltage) winding measured many mega ohms. Following the advice in one of the submissions above, I checked the connection in the spark plug boot and found it was corroded. Cut the end off, made a new connection and measured 10k ohms. With a smile I hoped it would fire up. Not so lucky, still no spark!
With good resistance readings, the coil appeared to be healthy, which left he "magneto module," as it is referenced by Toro. I didn't know a way to diagnose the module, so I ordered a universal module from Oregon (#33-053) for $14.71. Installed the module and runs like a champ. Storm to arrive tomorrow so just in time.
Thank you all.
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