Thanks for the info, the condenser is probally bad,but points are also burnt .Where do I get that capacitor and a set of points thanks a million DukeI put the electronic in.....then stripped it out and went back to points because it worked better.
If it is the condensor, you can just replace it with a polypropylene capacitor from Wima or Vishay. It needs to be about 0.2uF and 400V or more and have a low dissipation factor.
I used a Wima MKP4 0.22uF 630Volt 10% tolerance part with perfect results.
I am having trouble finding that part at distributors. You may be able to get away with a 250V version of the same part. Worth the experiment for under $1 in my opinion.
http://www.mouser.com/Search/ProductDetail.aspx?qs=76AoAlxFV7iVSP2ZUUrtYg==
I glued mine in the spot where the original condensor was (used silicone). I soldered to leads to it and attached one to the block and one to the points.
The link is in my original post for the capacitor. I would try just the points first. Just clean them up with emery cloth and set the gap to whatever the book says.... 0.018" I think.
Thanks ,I went to that web site and orderd 4 of them for less than 4 dollars thanks you DukeThanks for the info, the condenser is probally bad,but points are also burnt .Where do I get that capacitor and a set of points thanks a million Duke
I put the electronic in.....then stripped it out and went back to points because it worked better.
If it is the condensor, you can just replace it with a polypropylene capacitor from Wima or Vishay. It needs to be about 0.2uF and 400V or more and have a low dissipation factor.
I used a Wima MKP4 0.22uF 630Volt 10% tolerance part with perfect results.
I am having trouble finding that part at distributors. You may be able to get away with a 250V version of the same part. Worth the experiment for under $1 in my opinion.
http://www.mouser.com/Search/ProductDetail.aspx?qs=76AoAlxFV7iVSP2ZUUrtYg==
I glued mine in the spot where the original condensor was (used silicone). I soldered to leads to it and attached one to the block and one to the points.
I highly doubt those would work. They need to be in the 0.1-0.22uf range. Additionally they need to be low dissipation factor caps.....which are kind of a specialized things. The caps from Wima are proven to work on several saws. Additionally, I reverse engineered a good stock condenser to prove that out.
Enter your email address to join: