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RE: Two syncrospark units on one sensor
Thanks tkg. You answered my question in the begining and I appreciate it. I guess it somehow got off the subject.
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RE: Two syncrospark units on one sensor
I know the coil is a transformer..The spark coming out of the secondary jumps to the same black wire ground that the negative end of the primary is connected to...Yes, it is theoretically possible, if the spark plugs were inslulated from the cylinder and grounded to the circuit..Without this ground the spark jumps to the closest spot, the little black wire on the hall sensor...Or if the hall sensor is far enough away the spark jumps to the primary on the surface of the coil or down inside the insulation somewhere...
I think we're saying the same thing in different ways... Hey TKG, how does the spark jump across the gap if there is no ground to the engine ? Air is a pretty good insulator :D Somewhere along the line the engine gets connected to the negative side of the battery... |
RE: Two syncrospark units on one sensor
nobody said that the ground could be eliminated....or to isolate the plugs from the cylinders.
the ground would still be there, just connected to a plug terminal instead of the case. the spark just has to jump two gaps instead of one in order to get to ground. plenty of opposed twins have used this system. the only problem in our case is how to keep the spark from choosing the hall sensor as a ground instead of the second plug. i have sensors and magnets that'll work with a 1/4" gap and if that's still not enough then the sensor could be insulated with bakelite.......maybe i'm not saying that this is a superior system but for a 44CC twin it might be preferable to using two separate CH ignitions...it would save at least 1/2 lb. and that can make a substantial difference for a model this size. dave |
RE: Two syncrospark units on one sensor
OK since this rabbit is still running here goes.
You hook the coil to one spark plug like normal, BUT no ground. Then you hook the ground wire to the OTHER spark plug terminal. If you ground the engine to the ignition ground only the first plug sparks IT works this way, remember that electricty actualy flows from - to +, the spark voltage is sent to the first plug. It jumps the gap and then the voltage is in the engine where it jumps to the sensor and everything burns up and the engine stops. OOPS wrong way. ;) The voltage goes to the second plug ground electrode where it jumps to the center of the second plug and returns to the ignition as a completed path. P.S a CH ignition only weighs 3oz. |
RE: Two syncrospark units on one sensor
I defer to your superior knowledge of ignitions..:D
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RE: Two syncrospark units on one sensor
ORIGINAL: tkg P.S a CH ignition only weighs 3oz. also, since the original question was about using two syncro-spark ignitions i'm wondering if the delay would be perfectly in sync between the two ignitions. are they that accurate? dave |
RE: Two syncrospark units on one sensor
ORIGINAL: ZAGNUT ORIGINAL: tkg P.S a CH ignition only weighs 3oz. also, since the original question was about using two syncro-spark ignitions i'm wondering if the delay would be perfectly in sync between the two ignitions. are they that accurate? dave The delay is for starting. When the engine gets up to speed the delay is out of the circuit. |
RE: Two syncrospark units on one sensor
also, since the original question was about using two syncro-spark ignitions i'm wondering if the delay would be perfectly in sync between the two ignitions. are they that accurate? dave |
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