Ignition Woes
Posted: Tue Sep 16, 2025 11:05 am
Any electronics wizards here?
Last year my 350 broke down; one day as I approached a road junction the engine died, but it restarted straight away. A week later it did it again and was dead with no spark. Nigel and Edina were brilliant with helping me to find the fault with the Electrex World ignition (which turned out to be the pulsar ring). Today it has begun to play up again, stopping twice on a closed throttle as I slowed for a road junction, and both times restarting readily, just like before. Of course it could be something else causing the problem, but the odds are that the ignition is failing again.
Does anyone have any idea why it should die on a closed throttle rather than under load? And assuming that it is the ignition, what could be the cause? I went through the whole system last time and fitted a new ignition switch, so there is nothing obviously causing it and I don't want to shell-out for another ignition system. I can't risk using the bike again because getting stranded is not great!
Cheers,
Colin.
Last year my 350 broke down; one day as I approached a road junction the engine died, but it restarted straight away. A week later it did it again and was dead with no spark. Nigel and Edina were brilliant with helping me to find the fault with the Electrex World ignition (which turned out to be the pulsar ring). Today it has begun to play up again, stopping twice on a closed throttle as I slowed for a road junction, and both times restarting readily, just like before. Of course it could be something else causing the problem, but the odds are that the ignition is failing again.
Does anyone have any idea why it should die on a closed throttle rather than under load? And assuming that it is the ignition, what could be the cause? I went through the whole system last time and fitted a new ignition switch, so there is nothing obviously causing it and I don't want to shell-out for another ignition system. I can't risk using the bike again because getting stranded is not great!
Cheers,
Colin.