Well after spending the last couple of months away from home working on Army, Airforce and Navy bases I'm trying to pick up where I left off, and so my task today (well one of them anyway.........) was to install Marks "test" ignition on my K0 that I bought from Andy Morris in Long Island, NY.
The K0 is in pretty good condition overall, starts quite easily and runs pretty well, but of course I haven't had much time to ride it, (in fact, I haven't ridden it further than around my back yard) so it's started to miss and fart a bit lately.
Today I looked up at the sky and was rewarded with a face full of misty rain, so needless to say, i wasn't going too far. No biggie, the bike's not registered yet anyway, and I'm waiting for a set of new NGK Iridium plugs, so I figured I'd just install it and fire it up to see if there was any noticable differences, while I'm waiting for my new (free) plugs. (I won "letter of the month" in a bike magazine that I occasionally buy)
The install was simplicity itself, I fitted a NOS OEM points plate assembly even though the points plate assembly in it was pretty good, but I wanted to start with perfect parts. Mark gives you plenty of wire with his kits so there are no drama's stretching wires from the ignition box across to the points assembly or up to the coil wire connections etc. I made up a "two into one" connector so as to be able to connect the power wire from the brake light across to the ignition box, and of course disconnected the condensors.
I "Looped" the excess wire and used cable ties to tie the excess away to the back of the battery box, (I'd dropped the oil tank bolts so I could move the tank away from the frame to access the ignition wires) so with the oil tank back in place, they were invisible.
Once it was all ready to go, I fired it up (which took a bit as the battery is probably in need of a charge) but it only ran on two cylinders! "Uh oh, I've been here before", I thought to myself, but suddenly the other two kicked in, and it ran fine, and as has been mentioned before, it seemed to warm up a lot quicker requiring almost no choke once the engine was running.
By this time (about an hour to install it, but that included installing the new points plate assembly, making up a "two into one" power wire, and timing it with my timing light) the rain had stopped, but as I would have had to move a couple of cars to take it out onto the road I just ran it for a little while longer and did a couple of laps around my back yard, but it did feel good. I switched it off a couple of times and restarted it, and both times it was instantanious, so I reckon there's an improvement there too. I can hardly wait until I can get it out on the road and actually do some miles on it! Cheers, Terry.