TROUBLES
Should the engine show a tendency to miss, the first suspicion, if the magneto contacts are known to be correct, should fall on the spark plugs, and the easiest method of testing them out is to replace them with new ones. After considerable use, the spark plug points will burn off, and the size of the gap will increase to such an extent that the spark will find less resistance in traversing the safety spark gap than the gap in the plug.
In order that the ignition may be cut off for the purpose of stopping the engine, a switch is always provided by which the magneto may be short circuited, one pole of the switch being connected to the magneto terminal, or live wire, and the other pole grounded, as shown in Fig. 9. When this switch is closed, the magneto current flows through it in a closed circuit, and as it abandons its path through the interruptor there will be no further action in the coil, the ignition of course ceasing. This switch is often located in the rim or arm of the steering wheel, so arranged that pressing on a button closes the circuit and diverts the magneto current from the coil.
Any accidental short circuit of the magneto current will produce the same effect, and in case of the abrupt cessation of ignition, this is one of the probable causes. A short circuit in the secondary will usually make itself known by the snapping of the sparks as they pass through broken insulation or from a frayed cable end.
The remarks on general magneto troubles and care already made on page [254] also apply to a magneto of this type, and the same rules regarding the protecting of the circuit of the lines of the field must be borne in mind.