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Re: Distributor

To: Gregory Kirk <gkirk@empirenet.com>
Subject: Re: Distributor
From: Paul Hunt <paul.hunt1@virgin.net>
Date: Fri, 19 Dec 1997 20:05:42 +0000
Gregory Kirk wrote:
> 
> Trevor Boicey wrote:
> > > This happens as soon as the rotor swings around to an electrode inside
> > > the cap. Boom! A sparkplug ignites.
> >
> >   That's simply not true. The voltage will not "sit" on the rotor
> > waiting for the proper gap before firing.
> >
> >   The voltage appears at the rotor when produced by the coil. It
> > will either arc to the metal if the metal is close, or nothing
> > will happen. It will not "sit and wait" and screw up your timing,
> > that's simply not possible.
> >
> Actually, as I understand it (please correct me if I'm wrong) the coil
> is in essence a large capacitor, whose fucntion is to hold a charge
> until such time as there is a path to ground.  So the charge would in
> fact sit ( in the capacitor, not the rotor though) until the rotor came
> around and made contact with cap, wich provides the charge in the
> capacitor (ignition coil) with a path to ground ( via the spark plug).
> 
> Boom, plug fires.
> 
> Greg

The ignition coil is a transformer and a collapsing magnetic field in 
the primary, caused by the opening of the points, induces a voltage in 
the secondary (many more turns of wire than the primary, so many more 
volts) which will cause a current to flow if a closed circuit can be 
found.  The very high voltage will jump air gaps in a 'closed' circuit, 
if they are small enough (the rotor to cap and plug gaps).  If they 
aren't, the secondary voltage collapses without any current flowing.  
The coil doesn't store energy at all, and certainly not like a capacitor 
does.

PaulH.



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