My 66 CL77 has one condenser, I have seen post where people talk about having two. One for each point.
Do I need two condenser?
condenser
- moondoggers
- honda305.com Member
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- Joined: Thu Jul 18, 2013 11:53 am
- Location: Paulden, Arizona
- moondoggers
- honda305.com Member
- Posts: 102
- Joined: Thu Jul 18, 2013 11:53 am
- Location: Paulden, Arizona
- moondoggers
- honda305.com Member
- Posts: 102
- Joined: Thu Jul 18, 2013 11:53 am
- Location: Paulden, Arizona
yes I do have one large condenser firing both coils, was wondering why some bikes have two
. So type 2 motors run two then.
I am leaning towards installing a transistor unit in place of the condenser which I understand will give a better spark. Just an upgrade I think will smooth out the readability. My scrambler is a survivor that I want to make reliable.
. So type 2 motors run two then.
I am leaning towards installing a transistor unit in place of the condenser which I understand will give a better spark. Just an upgrade I think will smooth out the readability. My scrambler is a survivor that I want to make reliable.
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- h305 Moderator
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Type-2 motors use a 360deg crankshaft and have a single ignition system: one coil (with two HT outputs), one set of points and one single-wire condenser. Type-1 motors use a 180deg crankshaft -- dual ignition system: two coils, two sets of points and a two-wire condenser which, as I originally scribed, is really two condensers conjoined.moondoggers wrote:yes I do have one large condenser firing both coils, was wondering why some bikes have two
. So type 2 motors run two then.
I am leaning towards installing a transistor unit in place of the condenser which I understand will give a better spark. Just an upgrade I think will smooth out the readability. My scrambler is a survivor that I want to make reliable.