Mailing List flyrotary@lancaironline.net Message #6012
From: Dale Rogers <rogersda@cox.net>
Sender: Marvin Kaye <marv@lancaironline.net>
Subject: Re: [FlyRotary] Re: EC2 - No spark problem
Date: Fri, 27 Feb 2004 15:40:04 -0500
To: <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
John,

   You wrote:

> 4. And the winner......12v supply to lead coils suspect. It tested as 12V,
> but the plugs wouldn't spark. When I cross wired to the trailing coil supply
> the plugs sparked. I thought volts were volts. Apparantly not.
 
   Volts ARE volts, but the work gets done by the Amperes.  
Check to make certain that the wire size to each coil is
large enough to carry the maximum current the coils can
draw.  Check for high-resistance joints (e.g. cold solder, too small crimp surface, too little crimping force) in
each coil's supply.

Dale R.
COZY MkIV-R #1254    

Message
Thanks for all the input.
After a few calls to Tracy and a little help from Buly I tracked down the problem(s) and last night.
She went BrrrraaaaPPP for the first time at 9pm. What a beautiful sound! Not just because I wanted to hear it, but also because it truely IS a beautiful sound. Somewhere between a deep growl and race car whine it spoke of power and precision. I'm looking forward to hearing it again today - this time I'll turn the fuel pump on so I get more than 6 seconds worth. :)
 
The problems were -
1. Crank Angle Sensors too far away from trigger wheel - added a thin washer
2. CAS wiring reversed - pulse should be positive as you approach quickly with steel.
3. Cranking voltage/speed too low
4. And the winner......12v supply to lead coils suspect. It tested as 12V, but the plugs wouldn't spark. When I cross wired to the trailing coil supply the plugs sparked. I thought volts were volts. Apparantly not.
 
Many thanks to Tracy for his instant availability, patience and encouragement.
John (this is where I get my own back on the spam cans doing run ups outside my hangar door)
 
 
Subscribe (FEED) Subscribe (DIGEST) Subscribe (INDEX) Unsubscribe Mail to Listmaster