There's a problem with my bike. I strongly suspect it's electrical, and the searching I've done on this forum seems to support that. It might be something else, but before I put in a lot of time and effort narrowing the fault down, I want to make sure I'm doing it right.
The bike had an intermittent problem a month or so ago. I thought I'd fixed it after Pitter suggested checking the connectiors on the coils.
Last week, the bike wouldn't start. I took the battery out and charged it, and ran a bit of fuel through the carbs in case there was water in the tank. Battery charged and replaced, she fired first time. Problem appeared solved.
Then, at the end of a long ride yesterday, which had been completely problem free until that point, the bike starts intermittently firing. I check the connections at a friends house as well as you can without taking everything apart. No problems apparent.
After that, all seems well until about 2 miles from home. The bike dies at a traffic lights. 15 minutes of swearing later, it restarts. I try to keep the revs high so as to actually keep the engine running and ride home. Unfortunately I hit every red light on the way, and it proves impossible to keep the revs high all the time - bike stalls again approaching a set of lights and won't re-start.
It's currently in the garage waiting for me to fix it.
Now, I think its probably a faulty coil and/or coil connection. However, my searching suggests it might be carbs, or vaccuum, or something else mechanical. I don't think it is, because she was running sweet all day up until the final stretch.
I'm going to take out the plugs and check for spark as a first step.
Question:
If I DO get a spark on every plug but it still isn't firing, would I be correct in thinking that indicates a mechaical problem - e.g. carbs or fuelling?
If I DON'T get a spark on every plug, would that indicate e.g. a problem with the coil? If so, how do you check whether a coil is 'good' or not?
Cheers,
Rich