Panther 110 no start
#1
Hello everyone I have been reading threads and testing with nothing but frustration. Hopefully someone can point me in the right direction. The kids were riding the quad and it just stopped, it will crank fine but will not start.
The kill wire is disconnected from the cdi I have a good charged battery and I'm only getting 20v ac from the stator to the cdi with the cdi unplugged. With the cdi plugged in I show zero volts. And of course no voltage out to my spark plug. The cdi is a 5 pin ac version.
The kill wire is disconnected from the cdi I have a good charged battery and I'm only getting 20v ac from the stator to the cdi with the cdi unplugged. With the cdi plugged in I show zero volts. And of course no voltage out to my spark plug. The cdi is a 5 pin ac version.
#2
First off, removing the kill wire works if the CDI is earth to kill, some are wired earth to run, so need the kill wire earthed. Are you getting a voltage spike from the trigger coil on the alternator when turning the engine over? Do you get any voltage spikes from the CDI to the ignition coil?
#3
The kill switch should be grounded to kill it if it is the same as the one on the handle bars. I took the switch apart there and verified. As far as the trigger voltage I thought I could only view it with a scope. Can you let me know the procedure for checking it with the multimeter? Thanks
#4
Meter on AC, try with 20v scale, but they can produce anything from 0.2v to over 60v. Voltage to coil may be a lot higher, so try 1000v scale. Checking electronically just tells you that the components are producing something. If they are dead, change that component. To be honest, I usually check electronically as best I can, then go by substitution, plug, then ignition coil, then CDI, finally stator/trigger. Main thing is check that CDI is earthed or, if you fit a new one you will blow it, and once running, check regulator is not overcharging.
#7
Tried it. No voltage change at trigger and no voltage at all on the ac ignition power when the cdi is hooked up. Does this mean I need a new cdi?
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#8
Check everything at the CDI plug, with the CDI disconnected. If the trigger isn't producing any AC voltage when engine is spun on starter, it looks like the trigger coil is faulty. However they are often difficult to get at, and expensive, so be very sure it is faulty before swapping it.
#10
Right, so you get voltages from both trigger and exciter coils on the alternator, but once the CDI is connected, no power to the ignition coil, when engine is spun on the starter, looks like it is the CDI then.




