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using a car ignition coil
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Anonymous
using a car ignition coil
can u hook up a car's ignition coil with a distributor directly to the ignitor and the stock plugs?Tags: None
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Anonymous
Don't think so.
In theory you could, but you would need four coils; one for every cylinder. Skip the distributor, there's no distributor on a GS.
I'd get some new bike coils if I were you. Cheaper and easier to install.
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Forum LongTimerCharter Member
GSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter- May 2002
- 19277
- Toronto, Canada
Jojo is right.
Remember you have two cylinders firing at the same time on a 4-cylinder GS, and car-type coils cannot fire two plugs, only one, so you would need one coil for each cylinder, as he said.
The expense and effort of having to design a new system that would work with the GS basics, then finding/buying the parts would not be worth it.Bertrand Russell: 'Men are born ignorant, not stupid. They are made stupid by education.'
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Forum LongTimerCharter Member
GSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter- May 2002
- 44506
- Brooksville Fl.
Re: using a car ignition coil
NO!!
Earl
Originally posted by ice109can u hook up a car's ignition coil with a distributor directly to the ignitor and the stock plugs?Komorebi-The light filtering through the trees.
I would rather sit on a pumpkin and have it all to myself than be crowded on a velvet cushion. H.D.T.
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Anonymous
Remember you have two cylinders firing at the same time on a 4-cylinder GS,
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Anonymous
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Anonymous
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Anonymous
So basicly... the engine is a pair of linked parallel twins?
I always thought that it would fire like a 4 banger car engine. 1342
Jim
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saaz
No reason why it would not work if you can fit two coils and split the output of each into two (as per the standard bike coils). The question is whether it is work the effort.
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Billy Ricks
1&4 and 2&3 get fire to the plugs at the same time. This actually helps burn off any residual fuel mixture before the fill stroke. They all have individual compression strokes and firing times, but they get fire at the same time every stroke.
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focus frenzy
Originally posted by FOMOGOSo basicly... the engine is a pair of linked parallel twins?
I always thought that it would fire like a 4 banger car engine. 1342
Jim
several car makers, during the mid 80's to the late 90's, used distributor-less ignition systems that on four cylinder engines used two dual output coils to fire all four cylinders, 1 and 4, 2 and 3.
general motors, distributor-less coils would work on our bikes, IF the resistance and power requirements are within the tolerance level of the igniter box.
that is the problem, the GM coils have a very high output, they would most likely overload the igniter and burn it out.
Gm and others have gone to individual coils for each cylinder, on the GM vortec v-8's the coils have igniters built into each coil, the ECM tells each coil when to fire and the coil triggers it's self.
that way the timing can be adjusted to each cylinder.
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Anonymous
Originally posted by Billy Ricks1&4 and 2&3 get fire to the plugs at the same time. This actually helps burn off any residual fuel mixture before the fill stroke. They all have individual compression strokes and firing times, but they get fire at the same time every stroke.
Jim
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