Since I joined this Forum it became clear to me that many owners by times experience engine starting problems with their scooters. I also experienced an engine failure / no start situation, and the problem on my scooter was caused by a dying DC CDI. In my case the original CDI has been replaced as a matter of "thumb sucking", while I was only hoping that a new CDI would solve the starting problem. Fortunately luck was on my side - the original DC CDI was indeed faulty, and a new DC CDI solved the problem.
But since the new CDI installation on my scooter some comments at this forum clearly indicated that low battery Volts on scooters can also cause starting problems - even when the battery is still capable of swinging the engine. More reading on the Web confirmed - the batteries on scooters with DC CDI's need to be
fully charged - otherwise the CDI's will not be able to deliver sufficient Volts to assure a proper spark at the spark plug - and the scooter will battle to start
Since this information started sinking in I did more reading about this subject and to my surprise I discovered the following:
If the Voltage on the battery on my scooter is slightly too low (probably less than about 9.5 Volt) the Kick Start on my scooter will become useless. Simply because the battery Voltage will be too low to generate a proper spark at the spark plug.I only realized this after some intensive reading about DC CDI's, and after realizing how it actually works:
!. The purpose of a DC CDI's is to transform DC Volts
(from a battery) to a Capacitor inside the CDI - which release Volts to the ignition coil - which releases much higher Volts to the Spark plug.
This means on scooters with DC CDI's (like mine) the
battery (and ONLY the battery) "feeds" the ignition Coil and Spark Plug spark plug with power - the spark plug's power does
NOT come from the scooter's stator.
2. A Hall sensor on the scooter's flywheel
only triggers the CDI's Capacitor to release
stored power (Volts) to the ignition Coil and spark plug - again, the spark plug's power does
NOT come from the scooter's stater.
With this information in mind, I started wondering about the possibility of installing an additional Capacitor as "battery standby" on these scooters - just in case a battery is on it's way out - or even to replace a battery completely. There seem to be a lot of available info on the Web in this regard.
Has anyone ever tried something like this on a scooter with DC CDI ?
https://www.team-bhp.com/forum/motorbikes/199120-diy-eliminating-motorcycle-battery-adding-capacitor.html