sonex1374 wrote:The secondary ignition system can sometimes position itself such that the trigger magnet and triggering module are aligned such that electricity is continuously flowing through the coil.
When the magnet aligns with the trigger, the current through the coil is forced to drop from ~3.5A to ~0A. It's infact more likely it randomly positions itself such that no trigger is aligned with the magnet and you have electricity continuously flowing through both coils. In my experience, though, after a somewhat brief period of time (several seconds?), the triggers automatically stop sinking current through the coils if the engine is not running. Interestingly, this means the spark plugs won't fire until once the coils have been re-energized after one complete revolution of the engine. Might be good practice, then, to only switch the secondary ignition on just before engaging the starter.
Measuring the resistance of the two coils is a good idea. I believe it can be done reasonably accurately without removing them from the system as long as all the electronics are off. Mine are about 3.2 ohms each. If you measured ~2.5 ohms, I'd be concerned that your coils could be drawing enough to blow the 10A fuse.