I thought you were saying that you could plug an auto tach into the neg terminal on one gs coil and get a correct reading with it on the 8 cyl mode? I was suggesting you would be 4x too high, which seems to be confirmed by that last post of meter results. I'm confused. 8O
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wiring in a tach?
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fastpakr
Good point, I did double those numbers...
I thought you were saying that you could plug an auto tach into the neg terminal on one gs coil and get a correct reading with it on the 8 cyl mode? I was suggesting you would be 4x too high, which seems to be confirmed by that last post of meter results. I'm confused. 8O
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Anonymous
Originally posted by gtsg01Here is the result of my Dwell/Tach test on my GS1100.
Meter connected to the White wire of the 1-4 coil.
Engine idling at 1000 rpm indicated on mechanical tach
On 8 cyl scale = 250 rpm
On 4 cyl scale = 500 rpm
On 2 cyl scale = 1000 rpm
These readings are from an analog meter and are approximate, but in the ballpark.
The 4 cyl GS engine has 1 pulse per rpm. So you need a tach with a 2 cylinder setting.
I was quite surprised at the results. I have tried to work it out in my head and always came up with 2 pulses per rpm
Most of the inexpensive Tach's I have seen only have 8-6-4 cylinder settings.
If an automibile has 8 cylinders and one coil it fires 8 times for every two revolutions of the crank. A 4 cylinder car fires the coil (single coil) 4 times for every 2 revolutions. The GS fires each coil 2 times for every 2 revolutions or 1/2 the count for a 4 cylinder tach wired to the coil. You then get 1/2 the RPM reading on the tach.
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Anonymous
Originally posted by fastpakrGood point, I did double those numbers...
I thought you were saying that you could plug an auto tach into the neg terminal on one gs coil and get a correct reading with it on the 8 cyl mode? I was suggesting you would be 4x too high, which seems to be confirmed by that last post of meter results. I'm confused. 8O
Too many tach and pickup coil combinations here!
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fastpakr
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gtsg01
I did a quick search for Tach Adapters. Autometer makes a model 9117 that splices into the positive wire and senses the current fluctuations and converts them to a tach output.
On our bikes, both coils are powered from the same wire (orange/white) so if you put the 9117 into the circuit before the splice, the adapter would sense both coils, giving a combined 2 pulses per rpm.
that would allow a readily available 4 cylinder tach to be used. The 9117 is listed between $68.00 and $78.00 on the web.
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Anonymous
Originally posted by gtsg01I did a quick search for Tach Adapters. Autometer makes a model 9117 that splices into the positive wire and senses the current fluctuations and converts them to a tach output.
On our bikes, both coils are powered from the same wire (orange/white) so if you put the 9117 into the circuit before the splice, the adapter would sense both coils, giving a combined 2 pulses per rpm.
that would allow a readily available 4 cylinder tach to be used. The 9117 is listed between $68.00 and $78.00 on the web.
This is interesting. I've not seen this before. If it does what it says it should do the trick. The problem with using an auto tach is that they aren't weatherproof. Does anyone have a solution for that?
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Anonymous
Originally posted by fastpakrAh, now it's all becoming much less mirky! Thanks for clarifying.
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Anonymous
Originally posted by SwannyOriginally posted by fastpakrAh, now it's all becoming much less mirky! Thanks for clarifying.
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redliner1973
Originally posted by gtsg01On our bikes, both coils are powered from the same wire (orange/white) so if you put the 9117 into the circuit before the splice, the adapter would sense both coils, giving a combined 2 pulses per rpm.
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Anonymous
Originally posted by propflux01Originally posted by gtsg01On our bikes, both coils are powered from the same wire (orange/white) so if you put the 9117 into the circuit before the splice, the adapter would sense both coils, giving a combined 2 pulses per rpm.
It senses 2 coils by monitering the current in the wire. Notice that the way they have the coils wired in the example circuits. All of the coils are fed by one battery wire. The module is in series with it and can then detect any current fluctuations in ALL of the coils.
In order for this to work for you, you need the same configuration. You cannot have 2 separate wires delivering power to the coils since there is no way to monitor them both. Simply rewire the battery to the coils.
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gtsg01
The Orange/White wire is spliit somewhere beteen the Run/Stop and the coils. I have never taken the harness apart, but my guess is that the splice is close to the coils.
It would probably be better to run a new wire for this task, just to be safe.
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Anonymous
Originally posted by gtsg01The Orange/White wire is spliit somewhere beteen the Run/Stop and the coils. I have never taken the harness apart, but my guess is that the splice is close to the coils.
It would probably be better to run a new wire for this task, just to be safe.
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Detman101
Originally posted by gtsg01Here is the result of my Dwell/Tach test on my GS1100.
Meter connected to the White wire of the 1-4 coil.
Engine idling at 1000 rpm indicated on mechanical tach
On 8 cyl scale = 250 rpm
On 4 cyl scale = 500 rpm
On 2 cyl scale = 1000 rpm
These readings are from an analog meter and are approximate, but in the ballpark.
The 4 cyl GS engine has 1 pulse per rpm. So you need a tach with a 2 cylinder setting.
I was quite surprised at the results. I have tried to work it out in my head and always came up with 2 pulses per rpm
Most of the inexpensive Tach's I have seen only have 8-6-4 cylinder settings.
Dm of confused...
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Anonymous
Originally posted by Detman101Originally posted by gtsg01Here is the result of my Dwell/Tach test on my GS1100.
Meter connected to the White wire of the 1-4 coil.
Engine idling at 1000 rpm indicated on mechanical tach
On 8 cyl scale = 250 rpm
On 4 cyl scale = 500 rpm
On 2 cyl scale = 1000 rpm
These readings are from an analog meter and are approximate, but in the ballpark.
The 4 cyl GS engine has 1 pulse per rpm. So you need a tach with a 2 cylinder setting.
I was quite surprised at the results. I have tried to work it out in my head and always came up with 2 pulses per rpm
Most of the inexpensive Tach's I have seen only have 8-6-4 cylinder settings.
Dm of confused...
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Anonymous
Very good people...Since our bikes spark each cylinder at top dead center (combustion stroke or not) its 1 pulse per stroke.
On a four cylinder GS and a two cylinder GS there wouldnt be a difference, they both have two coils and both have 1 or 2 pistons at the opposite spot of the other.
So if you connected a 2-stroke tach to a 4- cylinders one coil it would read accurate same as if you connected a 2-stroke tach to one of the twins coils. twin is the same as a four, just two more pistons.
The reason why a cars tach wont work is because it fires the cylinders when they need it so it would appear our engines are running much faster then they really are.
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