Please Note: Coils do not charge up!
Coils are inductive loads. An inductive load is a load that interacts with a magnetic field. The relationship between voltage and current in an inductive load is v = Ldi/dt, or voltage = inductance times the rate of change of current with respect to time. An inductive load looks like a short circuit to DC electricity, but a resistance to AC electricity. The higher the frequency of the AC electricity (the faster it waves), the higher the resistance (impedence). AC electricity in an inductor produces a changing magnetic field. This changing magnetic field will induce AC electricity in another inductor that is in the field.
The property of a coil that means something is inductance (L). It represents the voltage induced by a change in the current through the coil. The greater the inductance, the higher the voltage induced for the same change in current.
In an ignition, coils have current running through them, and then they don’t. It is the transition that induces spark. And since electricity essentially flows at the speed of light (well not quite because it is flowing through a conductor and some circuitry) and it takes light approximately 0.000000003335640952 seconds to travel a meter, getting from the battery through the coil and ignition and back to the battery again before the next power stroke, even at red line, doesn’t even cause it to work up a sweat. The point at which the current stops flowing is what is important. It doesn't need more time to start flowing.
With points, it is essentially a mechanical switch that opens up based on the points rubbing against a cam that stops the current flow. With electronic ignition, it is an electronic switch that opens up, based on an electrical pulse from a magnet moving past a small wire coil. But the affect is the same. The current through the coil is shut off.
Within an ignition coil, there are actually two windings of wire wound very close together, but not physically connected to each other. The relationship between two windings located in this manner is that power dissipated in each will be essentially the same, but that the ratio of the voltage between them will be proportional to the number of wire turns in each winding. As an example, if winding 1 has 10 turns of wire and winding 2 has 1000 turns of wire, the voltage across winding 2 will be approximately 100 times greater than the voltage across winding 1. However, since the power must be the same, and power = voltage times current (not quite right for AC, but close enough for discussion), the current through winding 2 will be 1/100th of the current through winding 1.
Bottom line: It is the moment that current stops flowing through the coil primary winding that induces spark. The voltage produced in the primary winding of the coil is proportional to the inductance of the primary winding. The voltage induced in the secondary winding of the coil is proportional to the ratio of the number of turns in the primary winding to the number of turns in the secondary winding. The ignition controls the moment that the current stops flowing through the primary winding. The voltage induced in the secondary winding is high enough to jump across the spark plug air gap. That, and a little gas and compression, and Suzi's humming.
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