QC – Weak Spark (Ignition)
Symptom: Spark is present but weak, yellow/orange, inconsistent, or unable to jump a normal gap. Engine may hard-start, misfire under load, or break up at RPM.
Rule: Weak spark is almost always a voltage, dwell, or leakage problem. Replacing parts without proving those three wastes time.
Tools: Adjustable spark tester, multimeter, 12V test light, feeler gauge, basic hand tools.
Safety: Use an insulated spark tester. Do not hold plug wires or bare leads while cranking. Keep hands clear of belts/fan.
0) Prove the spark is actually weak
Do not judge spark by color alone on an open plug. You must load it.
- Use an adjustable spark tester. Set to a known gap (about 25-30 kV equivalent).
- Crank or run the engine.
Result:- Strong, consistent snap across the gap: spark strength is likely OK. Use another QC page.
- Weak, inconsistent, or no jump: continue.
Proof: QTS – Loaded Spark Output Test (coming)
1) System voltage and cranking voltage
Ignition energy is directly tied to system voltage. Low voltage equals weak spark.
- Battery voltage at rest. Should be about 12.6V on a healthy battery.
- Voltage while cranking.
Pass: about 9.6V or higher.
Fail: voltage drops below spec.
If fail: repair battery, cables, grounds, or starter before continuing.
Proof: QTS – Cranking Voltage Gate (coming)
2) Ignition feed voltage under load
You can have good battery voltage and still starve the coil through a bad feed, relay, or switch.
- Measure voltage at the coil/module feed.
- Crank or raise RPM with electrical load on (lights, blower).
Result:- Voltage significantly lower than battery: repair feed, relay, fuse link, or ignition switch circuit.
- Voltage stable and near battery: continue.
Proof: QTS – Ignition Feed Voltage Drop Test (coming)
3) Primary dwell / trigger integrity
If voltage is present but spark is weak, the coil may not be getting enough on-time (dwell) or the trigger is unstable.
- Check primary switching. Test light from battery positive to coil negative or driver wire.
- Observe at idle and with RPM increase.
Result:- Pulsing is erratic or disappears: trigger or controller issue.
- Pulsing steady: dwell may be insufficient for the coil/system.
Proof: QTS – Coil Primary Switching Integrity (coming)
4) Secondary leakage and excessive gap
Leakage and wide gaps force voltage higher than the system can reliably supply.
- Inspect plugs. Check gap, cracks, carbon tracking, and fouling.
- Inspect wires/boots/coils. Look for burns, cracks, loose terminals, or moisture.
Proof: QTS – Secondary Leakage + Plug Gap Gate (coming)
5) Coil capability sanity check
Some combinations simply exceed the coil’s capability (compression, boost, nitrous, RPM).
- Swap in a known-good coil (temporary).
Result:- Spark strength improves: original coil weak or marginal.
- No change: system-level limitation likely.
Proof: QTS – Coil Capability Confirmation (coming)
6) Decision closure
- Low system or feed voltage: repair power/ground path.
- Erratic or missing primary trigger: diagnose trigger, sensor, or controller.
- Secondary leakage or wide gap: correct plugs/wires/boots.
- Known-good coil fixes it: coil confirmed weak.
- All checks pass but spark remains weak: ignition system is undersized for the application (upgrade logic).
Next links: Ignition Troubleshooting Hub | QC – Misfire Under Load | QC – High RPM Misfire | QC – Intermittent No Spark
