Darmah Ignition Repair Adventure
Posted: Sat Jun 19, 2004 8:07 pm
I recently went through a trouble shooting process on the ignition of my 1978 900SD Darmah, and Steve thought it would be helpful for me to share my experience with other Bevel Heads. So, here it goes…
After finishing a long drawn out cosmetic restoration on my Darmah, I thought I was ready to fire her up and go for my first ride. The Darmah ran great when I took it apart, so I had no reason to think it would not still run great. So, I turn on the fuel, turn the key, and hit the button. Nothing. Not even a click. Great. It wasn’t supposed to be like this.
I back tracked through my resto in my head to see if I could come up with a likely culprit. I had cleaned the outside of the solenoid, and in retrospect I though I may have forced some solvent into the body of the solenoid. It didn’t occur to me that a suitable replacement for the Lucas solenoid would be available (I have since learned that many Japanese solenoids work, and even Ford solenoids are said to fit nicely!). Instead, I decided to take mine apart and find the problem. I drilled the 4 rivets out that hold the body halves together. Inside I found what looked like the wreck of the Titanic. There was so much corrosion it was hard to tell what was what. I cleaned and polished all the pieces, and reassembled the solenoid, sealing the body halves with Permatex and replacing the o-rings that seal the main terminals. I replaced the 4 rivets with 4 machine screws washers and nuts. After installing the solenoid on the bike, I poked the starter button. The engine immediately turned over. Problem solved.
I decided before I tired to actually fire the bike I would back up and check to see if I had spark. I removed the plugs, grounded them, and exercised my new solenoid. No spark. I thumbed the kill switch on the right handlebar, and I saw a spark!?! I checked the kill switch and it tested fine. I tried again. No spark. I thumbed the switch again, and got a spark. A quick question to the BevelHeads newsgroup confirmed that the kill switch grounds the coils when turned to off, causing the field in the coils to collapse, providing a spark. This is in essence exactly what the rotor passing by the ignition pick ups does. So, I know the coils/igniters are good, because I can produce a spark. But I also know I am not getting a signal from the ignition pick-ups to deliver that spark when the engine is turned over.
Backtracking again through the resto in my head, I remembered something. When I removed the clutch cover to polish it, I also replaced the bakelite gland nut on the ignition wires with a new metal one (they are still available directly from Ducati!). When I removed the old nut, I noticed that the wires from the Bosch ignition pickups were loosing their insulation. It appeared to be dried up, and cracking. Being that it ran fine, I made the mistake of assuming it was OK. I know, I am a little slow on the uptake!
So, I removed the cover again and took a closer look. Upon peeling back some of the outer loom containing the 2 pairs of pick-up wires, I could see large pieces of the insulation cracked and missing. A quick check with the ohm meter confirmed that both pick-ups had continuity to ground. Again assuming that the pick-ups would be made of the same material as the rest of the Darmah (Unobtanium), I decided to attempt a repair. I went to the electronics supply store and purchased several yards of 3M heat shrink with the adhesive inside. I did not want to have to re-time the engine, so I decided to try to re-insulate the wires while the pick-ups were still in the cover. Not impossible, but time consuming. I removed the gland nut and the female spade connectors on the ends of the pick-up wires where they plug into the igniters. I carefully stripped all the rotten insulation off the wires. Most of it was soft and gooey. The rest was brittle and cracked. I guess Italian wire does not like hot oil. After thoroughly cleaning the wires with alcohol, I slipped the heat shrink onto the wire. After heat shrinking all 4 wires, I slipped the 4 into a bigger piece of heat shrink to replicate the original harness. I soldered the spade connecters back on, and reinstalled the cover and wiring.
Back to step 1. Ground the plugs, thumb the starter button…SPARK!!!! Hooray! I installed the plugs, flipped the choke lever, and VAROOM, the Darmah came back to life. The Conti’s had never sounded so good!
Hope this story may help a few ‘Heads get their bikes rolling again. Now go out and ride…
Tim O’Mahony
1978 900SD Darmah
After finishing a long drawn out cosmetic restoration on my Darmah, I thought I was ready to fire her up and go for my first ride. The Darmah ran great when I took it apart, so I had no reason to think it would not still run great. So, I turn on the fuel, turn the key, and hit the button. Nothing. Not even a click. Great. It wasn’t supposed to be like this.
I back tracked through my resto in my head to see if I could come up with a likely culprit. I had cleaned the outside of the solenoid, and in retrospect I though I may have forced some solvent into the body of the solenoid. It didn’t occur to me that a suitable replacement for the Lucas solenoid would be available (I have since learned that many Japanese solenoids work, and even Ford solenoids are said to fit nicely!). Instead, I decided to take mine apart and find the problem. I drilled the 4 rivets out that hold the body halves together. Inside I found what looked like the wreck of the Titanic. There was so much corrosion it was hard to tell what was what. I cleaned and polished all the pieces, and reassembled the solenoid, sealing the body halves with Permatex and replacing the o-rings that seal the main terminals. I replaced the 4 rivets with 4 machine screws washers and nuts. After installing the solenoid on the bike, I poked the starter button. The engine immediately turned over. Problem solved.
I decided before I tired to actually fire the bike I would back up and check to see if I had spark. I removed the plugs, grounded them, and exercised my new solenoid. No spark. I thumbed the kill switch on the right handlebar, and I saw a spark!?! I checked the kill switch and it tested fine. I tried again. No spark. I thumbed the switch again, and got a spark. A quick question to the BevelHeads newsgroup confirmed that the kill switch grounds the coils when turned to off, causing the field in the coils to collapse, providing a spark. This is in essence exactly what the rotor passing by the ignition pick ups does. So, I know the coils/igniters are good, because I can produce a spark. But I also know I am not getting a signal from the ignition pick-ups to deliver that spark when the engine is turned over.
Backtracking again through the resto in my head, I remembered something. When I removed the clutch cover to polish it, I also replaced the bakelite gland nut on the ignition wires with a new metal one (they are still available directly from Ducati!). When I removed the old nut, I noticed that the wires from the Bosch ignition pickups were loosing their insulation. It appeared to be dried up, and cracking. Being that it ran fine, I made the mistake of assuming it was OK. I know, I am a little slow on the uptake!
So, I removed the cover again and took a closer look. Upon peeling back some of the outer loom containing the 2 pairs of pick-up wires, I could see large pieces of the insulation cracked and missing. A quick check with the ohm meter confirmed that both pick-ups had continuity to ground. Again assuming that the pick-ups would be made of the same material as the rest of the Darmah (Unobtanium), I decided to attempt a repair. I went to the electronics supply store and purchased several yards of 3M heat shrink with the adhesive inside. I did not want to have to re-time the engine, so I decided to try to re-insulate the wires while the pick-ups were still in the cover. Not impossible, but time consuming. I removed the gland nut and the female spade connectors on the ends of the pick-up wires where they plug into the igniters. I carefully stripped all the rotten insulation off the wires. Most of it was soft and gooey. The rest was brittle and cracked. I guess Italian wire does not like hot oil. After thoroughly cleaning the wires with alcohol, I slipped the heat shrink onto the wire. After heat shrinking all 4 wires, I slipped the 4 into a bigger piece of heat shrink to replicate the original harness. I soldered the spade connecters back on, and reinstalled the cover and wiring.
Back to step 1. Ground the plugs, thumb the starter button…SPARK!!!! Hooray! I installed the plugs, flipped the choke lever, and VAROOM, the Darmah came back to life. The Conti’s had never sounded so good!
Hope this story may help a few ‘Heads get their bikes rolling again. Now go out and ride…
Tim O’Mahony
1978 900SD Darmah