Observed a very interesting phenomenon today repairing a Sachs-Dolmar 166 ignition. Always when starting this saw cold I would wear myself out trying to get spark. Once the saw popped and started it ran fine. Easy peasy to start hot. It’s a free standing coil ignition so it’s Really Not rocket science. It either works or it doesn’t. I was convinced it was intermittently failing, although it never quit running on me. Well, thanks again to a member here I was able to score another coil for my 166. Believe me, it was like Christmas, again! I first checked the old coil for spark by grounding the threads of the (pulled) plug against the cyl fins and yanking the starter. Nothing, took the ground wire loose to eliminate the switch.Still nothing.
Removed the recoil to access the coil and decided to spin it up with my drill before removing it. NOW got spark. Hmmm. I snapped the recoil back on and gave it a mighty tug and got nothing. I replaced the coil with one supplied by the aforementioned member and now I got hot blue spark when I’m tugging on the starter. The original obviously wasn’t happy unless it was spun up pretty fast when first started. I just couldn’t spin this thing up fast enough. After running I was tickled to death. It popped on the 4th pull (tank was bone dry before I filled it) and started on the 6th. Ran like normal. It’s an interest failure. Either the coming in speed for the original coil “moved” or something and the replacement coil fixed the problem by coming in at a lower speed. After this afternoon I’m convinced the saw will be much more user friendly.
Removed the recoil to access the coil and decided to spin it up with my drill before removing it. NOW got spark. Hmmm. I snapped the recoil back on and gave it a mighty tug and got nothing. I replaced the coil with one supplied by the aforementioned member and now I got hot blue spark when I’m tugging on the starter. The original obviously wasn’t happy unless it was spun up pretty fast when first started. I just couldn’t spin this thing up fast enough. After running I was tickled to death. It popped on the 4th pull (tank was bone dry before I filled it) and started on the 6th. Ran like normal. It’s an interest failure. Either the coming in speed for the original coil “moved” or something and the replacement coil fixed the problem by coming in at a lower speed. After this afternoon I’m convinced the saw will be much more user friendly.