Bob_Spidell
Yoda
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This is the series of posts that prompted this:
Originally Posted By: Bob_Spidell
However, as soon as the secondary voltage has risen sufficiently for a spark to jump the plug gap--or find another path to ground--the coil will discharge its energy and the voltage will rise no higher.
Hi Bob,
That is not how I understand the process. The coil doesn't discharge when it reaches any particular voltage. It discharges when the points open, causing a drop in voltage in the primary wiring of the coil. This change causes the secondary field to collapse-causing the high voltage discharge.
The "new source's" explanation seems to indicate the spark fires when the gap is sufficiently ionized--after the points open--and the voltage across the points varies; i.e. it's not fixed at the coil's theoretical output (which I assumed the reply to my post implied--<span style="font-weight: bold">I may have been mistaken</span>). As I re-read these posts, there may not have that much disagreement. I didn't state it explicitly, but I certainly meant the process happens after the points open. I was actually convinced by the second post that the voltage across the gap would be fixed at the coil's rated output--e.g. 40KV (depending on gap)--but that's apparently not the case.
My main point was that a 'sports' coil won't buy you much in a stock Healey (Austin) engine--unless you're running at high RPM and/or have higher than stock compression--a 'sports' coil will fire at the same voltage as a stock coil all else being equal (the sports coil will support a larger gap, however).
Originally Posted By: Bob_Spidell
However, as soon as the secondary voltage has risen sufficiently for a spark to jump the plug gap--or find another path to ground--the coil will discharge its energy and the voltage will rise no higher.
Hi Bob,
That is not how I understand the process. The coil doesn't discharge when it reaches any particular voltage. It discharges when the points open, causing a drop in voltage in the primary wiring of the coil. This change causes the secondary field to collapse-causing the high voltage discharge.
The "new source's" explanation seems to indicate the spark fires when the gap is sufficiently ionized--after the points open--and the voltage across the points varies; i.e. it's not fixed at the coil's theoretical output (which I assumed the reply to my post implied--<span style="font-weight: bold">I may have been mistaken</span>). As I re-read these posts, there may not have that much disagreement. I didn't state it explicitly, but I certainly meant the process happens after the points open. I was actually convinced by the second post that the voltage across the gap would be fixed at the coil's rated output--e.g. 40KV (depending on gap)--but that's apparently not the case.
My main point was that a 'sports' coil won't buy you much in a stock Healey (Austin) engine--unless you're running at high RPM and/or have higher than stock compression--a 'sports' coil will fire at the same voltage as a stock coil all else being equal (the sports coil will support a larger gap, however).
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smilie in place of the real @
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