12 Volts To Coil But No Spark, 2L, 5. Without this high voltage, ther
12 Volts To Coil But No Spark, 2L, 5. Without this high voltage, there is no spark and, consequently, internal combustion cannot The primary side of the coil is 12v, the secondary side is maybe 20,000-30,000 volts, the side that shocks you. He assumed since the coil had power but no spark at the coil wire that the coil is probably bad. Without this signal, the ignition system will fail I got some issues with no spark since last friday, been poking around with my volt-meter and I found that there is no ground, or 12v for that matter to the coil. This truck is being used as a plow and is at camp (1hr away) so its kinda hard to get full details to you The ignition coil (Ignition coil) is an element of the ignition system that generates a high-voltage pulse of electrical energy, converting the low-voltage I finally checked for spark and there was none. Then, it needs a spark to ignite the mixture. I'm getting power to the coil but no spark out of the coil. If you have no spark then I suspect your issue is the pickup coil Hey folks, I have a '84 Dodge with no spark. Test Ignition Coil. Problems associated with meeting these requirements can be as simple as a corroded wire Hate to question you Tom, but I’ve been reading thread after thread on this issue, and everyone is saying there should be 12v on the green/white No Spark Test.