Inside a motorcycle ignition (spark plug) coil…

Motorcycle ignition coils play an important part in making the bike run, if they don’t work the bike won’t be able to produce a spark at the spark plug so the motorbike won’t run.

Coil with HT lead and plug cap

What does the motorcycle coil do?
Basically, the coils job is to produce a spark at the spark plug which ignites the fuel/air mix in the engine cylinder.
However, this isn’t as simple as it sounds as a bikes electrical system usually runs on 6 or 12 volts (slightly more with the engine running) and the spark at the plug is roughly around 15 to 20,000 volts (yes, 15 to 20 thousand volts!).
So the coil has to convert 12 volts into 15 to 20,000 volts to ignite the fuel.

Note – Be careful if you testing the spark with the plug out of the engine not to have your hands or fingers near the plug or touching the engine as you are likely to get one hell of a shock!

3 seperate coil parts
The 3 parts of the motorcycle coil, the ignition coil, HT (high tension) lead and spark plug cap
Ignition coil output end
Output end of the ignition coil
Ignition coil input end
Input end of the ignition coil
Motorcycle coil
Different parts of the outside of a motorcycle coil

The output from the coil connects the the HT lead (which connects to the spark plug), the input terminals connect to the CDI (the CDI sends a ‘pulse’ through these terminals telling the spark plug when to spark). The larger/central connectors on each end are the earth connections for the coil.

Cross section of a motorbike coil
Coil core, primary and secondary coils
Length way internal components of the coil showing the primary and secondary coils and the iron core.
Motorcycle coil cut across the middle
Cross section of the coil core, primary and secondary coils
Cross section of a motorbike coil showing the internal components.

The coil works by generating a magnetic field using coils (often made from copper) around an iron core. More detailed information about magnetic field and coils can be found here

Like all motorcycle parts, coils can start to fail with age, symptoms of a coil starting to fail can be:

  • Bike being very difficult to start or not starting at all.
  • Rough running engine.
  • Engine misfiring.
  • Strong petrol smell from exhaust (cause by the spark not burning all the fuel).
  • Increase in the amount of fuel used.
  • Engine management light coming on (on later bikes that actually have this light!).
  • No spark at the spark plug

Note – There are other problems and parts on a motorcycle that can cause the above problems and sometimes these symptoms can be caused because the HT lead or plug cap has worked loose.

Combined plugs and coils
Combined plug coils and caps from a Yamaha YZF-R1 engine.

Alot of later motorcycles use combined ignition coils and spark plug caps (also called ‘coil on plug’ systems) which does away with the need for HT leads and a separate coil.

Thanks to:
Good site with lots of good info about coils: dualwheeljourney.com
Information about spark plugs: https://bikerestart.com

Disclaimers:
The information provided on this page is ‘to the best of our knowledge’ and should not be taken as 100% accurate!!

To keep this page as a free resource for people to use, there are affiliate links (mainly Amazon) throughout the article. These affiliate links help maintain the cost of running this blog (basically, if you visit Amazon through one of the links and buy something, we make a few pence!).


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