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Simple Buzz Coil SeriesIn 1999 at the Tri State Gas Engine Association show at Portland Indiana USA I bought a small Briggs and Stratton which had been converted into a hit-n-miss model by a friend of mine Leroy Clark.
The most common coil you will find apart from those specific brands for a particular engine are the Ford Model-T coils, these can be had for around $5 or $10 at swap meets. While they are starting to become a little more scarce there is not shortage just yet. The Ford coils come in two types, those with Platinum points and those with Tungsten points. Internally they are the same, and externally they are very similar with only differences in the adjustment mechanism being noted. For stationary engine use they are much the same, but according to one of my favorite volumes Dyke's Automobile and Gasoline Engine Encyclopedia the tungsten (otherwise known as "K.W. Coils") are the better ones.
The coil is used to generate the high voltage supply needed by a spark plug by energising the core of the coil turning it into an electromagnet. This in turn pulls down the vibrator spring making a spark jump between the points of the contact spring and vibrator spring. Because electricity "wants" to continue flowing in the circuit once the sparking starts, the output of the secondary coil will increase in voltage to allow this thus building up enough current on the secondary output to create the hot blue spark we need on the spark plug.
Cleaning / Restoring a Buzz Coil | ||
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Last modified Sunday, 20-Jul-2003 15:28:00 BST | ||
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