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    #46
    hmm. a field collapse will resist a new field being created I guess the "dwell" is the important thing and where it all happens 32 degrees or so? so roughly 1/6 of the cycle is "discharge". at 5000 rpm that's be x2 for a 180 just to start..well I'm not in the mood for the math but that's not much time ...so yes maybe this is always a charged coil and never goes to zero. I guess it's true of two coils too but they'd have more time, I suppose.
    Last edited by Gorminrider; 11-15-2018, 01:13 PM.

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      #47
      Originally posted by Gorminrider View Post
      hmm. a field collapse will resist a new field being created I guess the "dwell" is the important thing and where it all happens 32 degrees or so? so roughly 1/6 of the cycle is "discharge". at 5000 rpm that's be x2 for a 180 just to start..well I'm not in the mood for the math but that's not much time ...so yes maybe this is always a charged coil and never goes to zero. I guess it's true of two coils too but they'd have more time, I suppose.
      Similar to an AC transformer. If you open the secondary circuit, then no current can flow in the primary even though it is a closed circuit. In effect, the impedance in the secondary is affecting the current flow of the primary. This is for AC sinewaves, but it generalizes to arbitrary waveforms based on the physics governing the mutual inductance of the coil.

      You slow the secondary, you slow the primary which apparently is just enough to keep the field collapse at a high enough rate that there is a spark to jump the gap.

      Mathematically dropping for delta T from 12 volts, produces a much secondary higher voltage than dropping for delta T from 6 volts. It is twice as much.

      I think the whole point of the resistor plugs is to reduce the ringing in the secondary that then kicks back into the primary and can stress the ignitor and create radio frequency interference (RFI)

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        #48
        Yes,I'm with you per the rfi..the rest is a little deep though I sort of get he must be getting the top of the voltage curve for his spark- a good thing... but as to the symptom...if the wrong setup causes such a peculiar failure...
        well,I'm still not sure if you (mcquillr) have resistor CAPS plus the resistor plugs (BR8ES--the R on these denotes 'resistor-type" I see from my NGK chart)...it's going to be an important point if anyone else gets this ignition system and has the same symptoms

        What do you think ? 10k ohm total per lead? with 2 leads that's 20k ...but we don't know the coil secondary's resistance...I am just wondering if maybe there's an "ideal proportion" leads' resistance to coil and if the manufacturer is more specific about this? If the wrong sum has already caused heating of a component, that would be a worry- so one hopes the blackbox cut out as a "safety" and nothing is permanently damaged.

        oh well

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          #49
          I think I am following all this, but I'm not sure we are all on the same page about how the EIS functions.

          They way I am understanding it is as show in my drawing here: https://imgur.com/a/o6U6aYJ

          No matter whether you have 1 or 2 coils in this EIS they will always be sparking the same amount of times in a repetitive cycle and the net sparks per unit time is always the same since in the 2-coil configuration shown in my drawing the 2 coils will always spark together. You can also see this in the YouTube video in this link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CVY4EYRwIno

          In this way, it wouldn't matter if you had 1 or 2 coils right?


          I'm not trying to be dense, I'm just trying to make sure I'm understanding this correctly.
          Attached Files
          Last edited by Guest; 11-15-2018, 03:56 PM.

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            #50
            Originally posted by Gorminrider View Post
            I'm still not sure if you (mcquillr) have resistor CAPS plus the resistor plugs (BR8ES--the R on these denotes 'resistor-type" I see from my NGK chart)...it's going to be an important point if anyone else gets this ignition system and has the same symptoms
            I am currently running resistor caps PLUS resistor plugs.

            Prior, I was running resistor caps with NKG B8ES plugs when the problem was occurring.

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              #51
              Originally posted by mcquillr View Post
              I think I am following all this, but I'm not sure we are all on the same page about how the EIS functions.

              They way I am understanding it is as show in my drawing here: https://imgur.com/a/o6U6aYJ

              No matter whether you have 1 or 2 coils in this EIS they will always be sparking the same amount of times in a repetitive cycle and the net sparks per unit time is always the same since in the 2-coil configuration shown in my drawing the 2 coils will always spark together. You can also see this in the YouTube video in this link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CVY4EYRwIno

              In this way, it wouldn't matter if you had 1 or 2 coils right?


              I'm not trying to be dense, I'm just trying to make sure I'm understanding this correctly.

              According to the manual you posted before,

              If there are two different wires to two different coils from the EIS then they are firing at different times (i.e. 1/2 speed).

              In the single coil configuration, it shows two wires from the EIS powering the coil which means it is firing twice as fast and the coil must recover twice as fast.

              Comment


                #52
                Originally posted by mcquillr View Post
                I think I am following all this, but I'm not sure we are all on the same page about how the EIS functions.

                They way I am understanding it is as show in my drawing here: https://imgur.com/a/o6U6aYJ

                No matter whether you have 1 or 2 coils in this EIS they will always be sparking the same amount of times in a repetitive cycle and the net sparks per unit time is always the same since in the 2-coil configuration shown in my drawing the 2 coils will always spark together. You can also see this in the YouTube video in this link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CVY4EYRwIno

                In this way, it wouldn't matter if you had 1 or 2 coils right?


                I'm not trying to be dense, I'm just trying to make sure I'm understanding this correctly.
                In that video it looks like both coils are in series so I guess they will fire at the same time LOL!!!!

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                  #53
                  Originally posted by posplayr View Post
                  According to the manual you posted before,

                  If there are two different wires to two different coils from the EIS then they are firing at different times (i.e. 1/2 speed).

                  In the single coil configuration, it shows two wires from the EIS powering the coil which means it is firing twice as fast and the coil must recover twice as fast.
                  But how? The computer doesn't know at which point in the combustion cycle the engine is in at any given moment so how would it know when to fire if it's only input is contact between two magnets?

                  Comment


                    #54
                    Originally posted by mcquillr View Post
                    But how? The computer doesn't know at which point in the combustion cycle the engine is in at any given moment so how would it know when to fire if it's only input is contact between two magnets?
                    there are a whole lot of things that are possible using two pickups well beyond what this simple device can probably do. That said I suspect it fires once per pulse or once for every pass of a magnet just like I said before two sparks per revolution.

                    two sparks per revolution with one coil is twice as fast as the coil wants to run.

                    Comment


                      #55
                      Originally posted by posplayr View Post
                      two sparks per revolution with one coil is twice as fast as the coil wants to run.
                      Right but then that means there’s not difference between having 2 coils versus 1 double output coil right?

                      Comment


                        #56
                        Originally posted by mcquillr View Post
                        Right but then that means there’s not difference between having 2 coils versus 1 double output coil right?
                        Uh No......................


                        How are you supposed to fire a single coil sperately on either output?

                        Comment


                          #57
                          Originally posted by mcquillr View Post
                          But how? The computer doesn't know at which point in the combustion cycle the engine is in at any given moment so how would it know when to fire if it's only input is contact between two magnets?
                          Especially the issue if you have a “180 degree” crank.
                          Does that Triumph Tiger have a 180/540 degree power pulses or does it have one pulse every 360 degrees?
                          If it has a power pulse every 360 degrees then then that EIS is acting like a waste spark ignition system as the “wasted spark” is on the exhaust stroke.
                          If it has 180/540 pulses, my head hurts trying to figure out what stroke each cylinder is on during the 540 portion!

                          And running those two coils in series, isn’t that going to cut the voltage in half?
                          Jim, in Central New York State.

                          1980 GS750E (bought used June,1983)
                          1968 CB350 Super Sport (bought new Oct,1968)
                          1962 CA77 305 Dream (bought used Feb,1963)

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                            #58
                            You need to get two test lights. Put one on each EIS output wire (one white one black to the coil). Figure it out from there.
                            Those wire should alternatingly power your test lights.


                            This picture shows quite clearly that there are two 180 degree opposed pickups on the crankshaft output.
                            The diagram shows both white and black wired-AND to discharge the dual output coil.
                            This is a single coil but with double output like a 1-4 coil.

                            The wired-AND will fire that single coil twice per revolution of each 180 degree when there is a new pickup. Either one is low fires the coil off.


                            Last edited by posplayr; 11-15-2018, 10:47 PM.

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                              #59
                              Okay I contacted Boyer-Brandsen and they responded quite quickly:

                              ”Dear Boyer-Brandsen,

                              I am still unclear on one thing: What would be the difference between hooking up the EIS with one or two coils? In a 2-coil configuration would both coils always fire at the same time making it analogoues to a single coil onfiguration or are the two coils sparking out of phase in a 2-coil setup?

                              Thanks”

                              Boyer’s Response:

                              ”Thank you for your enquiry, the dual coil or two single coil will operate the same way. The ignition uses the wasted spark principle for both cylinders.

                              Regards,
                              B.B. Tech”

                              Comment


                                #60
                                You did not ask them anything! Of course the EIS operates the same. It only looks at the pickup and doesn’t know about anything else about coil configuration. You would have to ask specifically about the coil you are using and whether it will run twice as fast. Of course it is not their voil so they won’t answer that.

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