Re: Mariner 40 (2cyl) problems with ignition coils
The charging(aka exciter,charge,power,source etc)coil produces ac current that is rectified to dc within the ignition module. This dc current is then used to charge up a storage capacitor. The trigger coil(aka pulser,timing coil etc) produces a small amount of ac voltage(wound for a very fast build-up)that is monitored by control electronics, and used to trigger a SCR (electronic switch) that closes the output circut from the capacitor to the ignition coil (aka pulse transformer, secondary coil, final coil etc)dumping the stored charge of the capcitor into the primary windings of the ign coil causing a rapid building of electomagnetic flux around the secondary winding, which produces a high voltage to jump the spark plug gap. By mimicing the wire size and windings ratio you should get a close voltage, however, there is very little tolerance for voltage outside of design parameters, and this may be throwing off the elec in the module. You should be able to read ac voltage coming fron the coil(that you repaired) outputs with an ac voltmeter (x 1.414 to convert to peak v). See how these compare to the factory numbers in the manual. Can you not find these coils?? I would think replacement with used ones would be easier. If you have voltage at the charge and trigger coils, check for voltage at the ignition coil primary lead.If no voltage, the module is probably bad. Be sure to isolate any kill circuts when testing so a bad kill or saftey switch is not the cause of no spark. For used parts, I use
www.tcoutboard.com