SiLiconD17
Seaman Apprentice
- Joined
- Jun 21, 2007
- Messages
- 44
I bought a 17' Aquasport with a 90hp V4 Johnson on it and when I had first purchased it the motor was running fine. I suspected the previous owner had overheated it, so I pulled the heads to inspect and didn't find anything worth rebuilding it for so I put it back together with new head gaskets and flushed out the water passages in the block, cleaned and tested the thermostats, and flushed out the crap in the lower unit. Compression is well within spec and close on all 4 cylinders, fheew.
So after that, it sat for a while as I had purchased a house at the same time and was in the process of moving things and repairing the house, etc, you all know how the story goes. I recently tried cranking it, and it just isn't getting any spark. I got some intermittent spark on one bank. I had a crappy volt/ohm meter so a few weeks ago I just cleaned and tested all the grounds and connections on the power packs, coils, etc and put on some new plug wires. Now that I have a good volt meter, it is not getting any spark whatsoever with a spark plug tester. I have disconnected the stop switch wiring and also tried with the rectifier disconnected, still no spark on any cylinder. I have also pulled the flywheel and cleaned it, everything looks A-OK beneath (timer base, stator, etc). So today with a better Fluke voltmeter, I tested the wires coming from the power pack and into the coils, and one power pack seems to be outputting on both wires and the other one doesn't output jack. Being that my Fluke doesn't measure peak voltage, I just tested DC V on each lead and at regular intervals (when it seems it should spark), I am getting 2.5-3.5V from one power pack, and nothing from the other. I tried swapping the power packs between banks and the "bad" one still outputs nothing, the "good" one outputs the same as on the other bank. Should I really try with a voltmeter capable of measuring peak voltage, or is my test good enough and I can consider the one power pack failed?
Also, if the power packs are outputting and I am still not getting spark, is it safe to say the coils are all toast? They look original and in sad shape, but it was running on all 4 cylinders when I first bought it. I am close to replacing both power packs and all 4 coils, but obviously saving money would be nice.
So after that, it sat for a while as I had purchased a house at the same time and was in the process of moving things and repairing the house, etc, you all know how the story goes. I recently tried cranking it, and it just isn't getting any spark. I got some intermittent spark on one bank. I had a crappy volt/ohm meter so a few weeks ago I just cleaned and tested all the grounds and connections on the power packs, coils, etc and put on some new plug wires. Now that I have a good volt meter, it is not getting any spark whatsoever with a spark plug tester. I have disconnected the stop switch wiring and also tried with the rectifier disconnected, still no spark on any cylinder. I have also pulled the flywheel and cleaned it, everything looks A-OK beneath (timer base, stator, etc). So today with a better Fluke voltmeter, I tested the wires coming from the power pack and into the coils, and one power pack seems to be outputting on both wires and the other one doesn't output jack. Being that my Fluke doesn't measure peak voltage, I just tested DC V on each lead and at regular intervals (when it seems it should spark), I am getting 2.5-3.5V from one power pack, and nothing from the other. I tried swapping the power packs between banks and the "bad" one still outputs nothing, the "good" one outputs the same as on the other bank. Should I really try with a voltmeter capable of measuring peak voltage, or is my test good enough and I can consider the one power pack failed?
Also, if the power packs are outputting and I am still not getting spark, is it safe to say the coils are all toast? They look original and in sad shape, but it was running on all 4 cylinders when I first bought it. I am close to replacing both power packs and all 4 coils, but obviously saving money would be nice.