Ms261c no ignition

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
According 2 Stihl techs and 1 Stihl tech here yes. I trust them more than a forum poster who has obviously never even held a motronic in their hands. Which is obvious based on statements and questions they asked.....
Based on the fact that the coils are grounded out to kill them I would say yes and it's the first thing I check, spinning on a drill with plug removed. See post #37
 
Actually I think you should have a look at what you wrote and edit the comment. It is a kick in the balls to the people on this site that are trying to help you and if so you should not be asking for advice.
According 2 Stihl techs and 1 Stihl tech here yes. I trust them more than a forum poster who has obviously never even held a motronic in their hands. Which is obvious based on statements and questions they asked..
 
My thoughts on that coil is it should work with the wires disconnected and you put a second one on already.
OP needs to try this and report back... and you (and all off the other armchair quarterbacks) need to pay attention!
 
Now that you have it running... disconnect the wiring harness at the coil and see how much spark you have and report back here.
Yes that's how it works on a normal saw, and the motronic is no different. I knew this saw needed a coil, but I wanted to double check before I threw a $150 coil at a saw when I wasn't 100% confident in my understanding of motronic. there is so much bad information on the Internet, it totally threw me off on what should have been a straightforward repair.
 
So, just so I have it straight in my head

If you disconnect the plug from the ignition module it will fire, just like a non Mtronic. ??

Just that the solenoid won't work.

I sold my MS362 Mtronic or I would test it myself.
Yes. The "ecm" is just sending a signal to the solenoid which is its duty cycle.

Obviously it has memory though...the Stihl diagnostic software can interpret everything you can extrapolate from a tach signal....I assume. Never seen the Stihl software. But I'm not sure what it could read besides rpm, Start attempts, duty cycle of solenoid, I guess engine position. If someone has more insight, or I am wrong, please share. I'm just making assumptions from looking at the saw. I don't see how the diagnostic softwares channel/pids can be grabbing engine performance info from any other source/input.
 
Yes. The "ecm" is just sending a signal to the solenoid which is its duty cycle.

Obviously it has memory though...the Stihl diagnostic software can interpret everything you can extrapolate from a tach signal....I assume. Never seen the Stihl software. But I'm not sure what it could read besides rpm, Start attempts, duty cycle of solenoid, I guess engine position. If someone has more insight, or I am wrong, please share. I'm just making assumptions from looking at the saw. I don't see how the diagnostic softwares channel/pids can be grabbing engine performance info from any other source/input.
Sent from my arm chair:
The coil chip grounds through the harness. The saw will not run with it disconnected HOWEVER
depending on how you test the coil "IF" the problem is in the wiring you should be able to get a different reading via a scope or led, a spark tester won't show squat.
I don't think anybody chimed in on the magnets yet either.
 
The coil that I replaced would not operate the solenoid. I got there when there was nothing else it could be.

Another coil related issue was the owner had replaced the top handle and harness on a MS201TC and when he put it back together he put the yellow wire under the screw that holds the connector in place instead of to ground.
 
Took the plunge, Fired right up with new coil. What do you know.....
So did you bother to verify that the original coil was actually bad by "back substitution"? Back substitution is that once you that you think that you have found the guilty component is to substitute it back into the system to see if it is still bad. I learned this about 45 years ago when replacing vacuum tubes in consumer electronics.

The point is that you have touched many other connected components in the wiring harness which could have been the real cause of the failure that you actually fixed without knowing it. Back substitution is the only way to prove that the original coil was really the root cause of the original failure.
 
So, just so I have it straight in my head

If you disconnect the plug from the ignition module it will fire, just like a non Mtronic. ??

Just that the solenoid won't work.

I sold my MS362 Mtronic or I would test it myself.
WRONG!!! While you might get a spark or two, once the computer figures out that it can't see the solenoid it will kill the spark.

We are still waiting on the OP to perform this experiment.
 
WRONG!!! While you might get a spark or two, once the computer figures out that it can't see the solenoid it will kill the spark.

We are still waiting on the OP to perform this experiment.
This is exactly what my 441c was doing.
Run for bout 3 seconds then lose spark as it didn't see solenoid.
So it was still getting fuel.
 
I seem to be getting dumber as this thread goes on.
No disrespect intended but it would be extremely useful to everyone who has to work on these to have this information for future reference. Hopefully someone (or the OP) who has a working m-tronic could provide this information. Functionality may also be different between V1, V2, and V3 M-tronic systems so this should be tracked as well..

BTW, do you have access to any of Stihl's training info on m-tronic? A good theory of operation might be revealing.
 
This is exactly what my 441c was doing.
Run for bout 3 seconds then lose spark as it didn't see solenoid.
So it was still getting fuel.
This sounds entirely plausible. It takes a second or three to figure out that it can't control the solenoid (fuel supply) and kills the spark.
 
Back
Top