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Dyna Coils
- bkitchen
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- Jeff.Saunders
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2.2 Ohm - no - unless you are going to run a Dyna 2000 ignition system, the 2.2 Ohm coils are too low resistance.
3.0 Ohm - only if you are running a Dyna-S or similar electronic ignition, or you plan on converting from points in the very near future. Although the 3.0 Ohm coils will work with points, the points will pit much quicker than usual.
5.0 Ohm - yes if you are running points and plan on staying with points in the near term. The 5.0 Ohm coils will work with points, and with the Dyna-S ignitions if you choose to replace the points in the future.
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- bkitchen
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- Jeff.Saunders
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Some bike would use 2.2 ohm coils, others 3 ohm - and the 79/80 year 1000's used 1.5 ohm, but with a ballast resistor in the circuit.
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- bkitchen
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- N0NB
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- Blue handles better
Nate
Nates vintage bike axiom: Riding is the reward for time spent wrenching.
Murphys corollary: Wrenching is the result of time spent riding.
1979 KZ650 (Complete!)
1979 KZ650 SR (Sold!)
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- bkitchen
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- Paling1
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That's a quite dangerous way of measuring the resistance of the coils.A volt-ohm-meter is all you need for the test. Set it to Rx1 scale and measure the primary leads going into the coils (after disconnecting them from the wiring harness). Measure each coil individually and you'll be able to read their values directly from the meter.
Some bikes use a ballast resistor. You can skip the ballast resistor if the overall resistance of the new coils is the same as the old ones including the ballast resistor.
Ballast resistors can fail, the result being a fried CDI...
Post edited by: Paling1, at: 2007/04/17 05:13
KZ700-A1 (1984)
525 chain conversion; Dyna 2,2 ohm coils; Taylor plugwires; Stainless steel ZR-7 exhaust ; Remus muffler.
Plans: GPZ cams, ported head, 17 inch wheels, EFI....
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- steell
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N0NB wrote:
That's a quite dangerous way of measuring the resistance of the coils.A volt-ohm-meter is all you need for the test. Set it to Rx1 scale and measure the primary leads going into the coils (after disconnecting them from the wiring harness). Measure each coil individually and you'll be able to read their values directly from the meter.
Some bikes use a ballast resistor. You can skip the ballast resistor if the overall resistance of the new coils is the same as the old ones including the ballast resistor.
Ballast resistors can fail, the result being a fried CDI...<br><br>Post edited by: Paling1, at: 2007/04/17 05:13
But as far as I know the only KZ's with a ballast resister are certain years of KZ1000's, and he has a KZ900.
And I know that none of the KZ four stroke models had CDI ignition, although the two stroke triples did.
Ballast resisters fail by increasing resistance, not by decreasing it (it's the nature of their construction), so if a ballast resister fails you are going to get little or no current.
KD9JUR
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- wiredgeorge
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wiredgeorge Motorcycle Carburetors
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Too many bikes to list!
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- Paling1
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But as far as I know the only KZ's with a ballast resister are certain years of KZ1000's, and he has a KZ900.
And I know that none of the KZ four stroke models had CDI ignition, although the two stroke triples did.
Ballast resisters fail by increasing resistance, not by decreasing it (it's the nature of their construction), so if a ballast resister fails you are going to get little or no current.
Steell, you are absolutely right, but the point I was trying to make is that if you don't check the ballastresistor (if there is one) you don't know if it is allright. So you can change the coils, but still have a problem with a weak spark because of a high total resistance of the new coil and old ballast resistor.
And I think that less parts (2 instead of 4) is better for reliability.
KZ1300 also have ballast resistors according to this:
www.kz1300.com/techfaq.html#cp2
That's where I read the CDI would fry if the resistance of the coils is too low...
What's the difference between a transistorized ignition and a CDI?
KZ700-A1 (1984)
525 chain conversion; Dyna 2,2 ohm coils; Taylor plugwires; Stainless steel ZR-7 exhaust ; Remus muffler.
Plans: GPZ cams, ported head, 17 inch wheels, EFI....
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- steell
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An excellent explanation of how the different types work is at www.jetav8r.com/Vision/Ignition/CDI.html
KD9JUR
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