9.8, 2 stroke. Serial A901055. Top cylinder not contributing. Compression at 125 psi, spark plug does fire and spark energy will jump 3/8" air gap. With the engine running I can pull the spark plug lead from the top cylinder and the engine performance does not change in the slightest. If I pull the plug wire from the lower cylinder the engine will die. If I pull the bottom first, the engine dies. It will not run on the top cylinder alone. So, top cylinder not contributing. Compression is present. Spark is present.
Tried spraying premix into top cylinder and I get nothing. I believe it should fire. For this test, "timing" shouldn't matter. With compression and spark I should get a reaction. My conclusion is that the top cylinder spark-to-compression timing must be out. Bottom cylinder spark-to-compression timing must be correct or close enough.
What parts influence spark-to-compression timing or cylinder-to-cylinder timing; flywheel magnets, crankshaft design and machining, magneto coil-to-coil positioning under flywheel, trigger signal, switchbox?
Do stator and magneto coils influence cylinder-to-cylinder performance other than by their positioning under the flywheel? With the flywheel magnet they generate the stuff to be processed but can they influence cylinder-to-cylinder? I understand the switchbox sets a threshold and discharges capacitors to the ignition coils, but, does it have an influence over cylinder-to-cylinder discharge relationship?
Can I mark the flywheel based on TDC of pistons and put a timing light on each plug lead?
Without proper diagnostics I'm doomed to throw money at parts and probabilities.
What part should I go after first?
Thanks,
J
Tried spraying premix into top cylinder and I get nothing. I believe it should fire. For this test, "timing" shouldn't matter. With compression and spark I should get a reaction. My conclusion is that the top cylinder spark-to-compression timing must be out. Bottom cylinder spark-to-compression timing must be correct or close enough.
What parts influence spark-to-compression timing or cylinder-to-cylinder timing; flywheel magnets, crankshaft design and machining, magneto coil-to-coil positioning under flywheel, trigger signal, switchbox?
Do stator and magneto coils influence cylinder-to-cylinder performance other than by their positioning under the flywheel? With the flywheel magnet they generate the stuff to be processed but can they influence cylinder-to-cylinder? I understand the switchbox sets a threshold and discharges capacitors to the ignition coils, but, does it have an influence over cylinder-to-cylinder discharge relationship?
Can I mark the flywheel based on TDC of pistons and put a timing light on each plug lead?
Without proper diagnostics I'm doomed to throw money at parts and probabilities.
What part should I go after first?
Thanks,
J