by Puffs » Sat Jun 15, 2019 6:32 am
Thanks for your replies.
Yes Guesi, I thought you might say that. Of course it depends on which breakers they are. But assume they are the ones originally fitted in my case, but if you could give an indication for the different types that would be helpful.
Andy, yes, felt pad has been kept lubricated, and no, there is no electronic ignition (it uses these points / contact breakers for that - original electric system, '89 ETZ251).
David, I guess the voltage is in the order of 10kV, with short yet rather enthusiastic bursts of current, and that the capacitor is in good order.
I know there are 2 places the breakers wear:
- at the contact points, where the spark causes burning-in, i.e. tiny metal particles taken off by the current in the spark (and not actually so much 'burned' in the sense of oxidised = chemically combined with oxygen, because of the alloy used). The capacitor (=condenser) will reduce the high frequency component of the current, which is the most energy-rich, hence it extends the life of the points.
- at the contact ridge, which follows the cam, being pressed down onto it by the spring - just ordinary wear. Less if well lubricated, and if your cam is nice & smooth. A rough or corroded cam will eat your cam follower ridge in short order.
The background of my question is that I cannot remember ever having replaced these points, on this bike. What I do is sand the points so they keep a smooth surface, adjust the lot & lube the felt. Now I might have forgotten that I replaced them (had the bike for over 20 years now), but also: you replace points before they fail, so they are then still in working order, and then I normally keep the old ones (as they can help you in a bind, and take up no space). Yet I have none for this bike. So that leads me to believe that I never replaced them. But the bike is well on the way to the 33k mile mark (25k with me), so that made me wonder: is it possible that these are the original ones? On a car, when they still used points, this could be a normal replacement mileage, but on an ETZ?
So I'm just looking for a number.
Last edited by
Puffs on Mon Jan 06, 2025 7:46 am, edited 2 times in total.