Home › Forums › Motorcycle help wanted › Any ideas what a ballast resistor does?
- This topic has 3 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 20 years, 5 months ago by Radar.
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- May 18, 2004 at 4:58 pm #8806yingtingParticipant
Not urgent but a tech question I would like to know the answer to
May 22, 2004 at 5:56 pm #19273imperialdataKeymasterYes. When starting a car, the wiring via the start switch allows you to give the coil a full 12V and then a ballast resistor cuts in to drop the voltage that the coil runs at. Not seen very often on bike circuits though!
Hope that helpsMay 29, 2004 at 1:55 pm #19274GSX RatParticipantMy understanding of the ballast resistor is as follows. A coil works at something like 9 volts(for arguments sake – it might not be exactly but bear with me) so the ballast resistor is used during normal running conditions to drop the voltage from the car/bike electrical system to the required voltage as imperial stated. However, during heavy load conditions on the battery such as cranking the engine over , pulling massive current the voltage across the battery drops so the coil is supplied straight from the battery (reduced voltage remember)so that it continues to function and provide a strong spark.
GSX750 Ratfighter / GSX600F / Beamish250 / Honda70 Rat
Blackboard paint – Covers a multitude of sins!
July 6, 2004 at 9:39 pm #19275SneakyPeteParticipantGSX Hooly – exactly so – as found on 1100 Goldwings which run 6v coils with a ballast – 12v fat sparks for starting and reduced voltage for running.
Matt Black and no other
July 10, 2004 at 11:01 pm #19276RadarModeratorBallast resistor – does it fight fat??!! – I’ll shut up now..
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