oneoldsaw
ArboristSite Lurker
Hi forum!
So I figured I'd try to get my dad's old saw running again. No spark. A little googling turned up "blue Prestolite coil of death", and suggested baking the coil in an oven. That actually worked... for about a minute. A longer bake (24hrs @ 115C) and it worked for 10 minutes. Long enough to confirm the rest of the saw is fine, anyway. (9980 rpm free running, 149psi tested warm)
So, on to replacing the ignition. I didn't have a donor saw handy with a "points" coil, so I ordered one online based on manufacturer and appearance. It is physically very similar, and I was able to swap the core from the blue coil onto the new one and fit it into the saw just fine. The nova module fits in a nook under the starter housing, as per the photo.
Here's the curious bit: Pull the cord, no spark. Flip the kill switch to "stop", and now there's a spark! How the heck? The kill switch connects to one of the spade connectors at the top of the coil, and as far as I can tell those spade connectors are a short to the black points wire coming out of the bottom of the coil, so with the kill switch closed there is continuity from the chassis, to the switch, to the tab, to the points wire, to the + terminal on the nova module. And the - terminal on the module also goes to the chassis. So, there is continuity across the terminals of the nova module via two points in the chassis and whatever is going on inside the coil, yet the saw runs!
Put the switch into the "run" position, and no spark. Switch tests fine. I also tried the nova module in reverse polarity, and it sparks just the same though I didn't run it that way.
Anyone seen this before, or care to guess what's going on inside that mystery coil? Is it just wound in the opposite direction?
Anyone have a known compatible points coil for a reasonable price, or a part number for one?
Is anything likely to blow up if I just rotate the stop switch 180 degrees and use the saw?
So I figured I'd try to get my dad's old saw running again. No spark. A little googling turned up "blue Prestolite coil of death", and suggested baking the coil in an oven. That actually worked... for about a minute. A longer bake (24hrs @ 115C) and it worked for 10 minutes. Long enough to confirm the rest of the saw is fine, anyway. (9980 rpm free running, 149psi tested warm)
So, on to replacing the ignition. I didn't have a donor saw handy with a "points" coil, so I ordered one online based on manufacturer and appearance. It is physically very similar, and I was able to swap the core from the blue coil onto the new one and fit it into the saw just fine. The nova module fits in a nook under the starter housing, as per the photo.
Here's the curious bit: Pull the cord, no spark. Flip the kill switch to "stop", and now there's a spark! How the heck? The kill switch connects to one of the spade connectors at the top of the coil, and as far as I can tell those spade connectors are a short to the black points wire coming out of the bottom of the coil, so with the kill switch closed there is continuity from the chassis, to the switch, to the tab, to the points wire, to the + terminal on the nova module. And the - terminal on the module also goes to the chassis. So, there is continuity across the terminals of the nova module via two points in the chassis and whatever is going on inside the coil, yet the saw runs!
Put the switch into the "run" position, and no spark. Switch tests fine. I also tried the nova module in reverse polarity, and it sparks just the same though I didn't run it that way.
Anyone seen this before, or care to guess what's going on inside that mystery coil? Is it just wound in the opposite direction?
Anyone have a known compatible points coil for a reasonable price, or a part number for one?
Is anything likely to blow up if I just rotate the stop switch 180 degrees and use the saw?