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Re: warning light and alternator

To: "Richard B Gosling" <Gosling_Richard_B@perkins.com>,
Subject: Re: warning light and alternator
From: "John Hobson" <goalie_john@yahoo.co.uk>
Date: Tue, 28 Nov 2000 16:09:17 -0000
Is a new ignition coil easy to fit (in comparison to fitting my alternator,
which was simple)?  Is there any way to test wether the current one is shot?

cheers
John
----- Original Message -----
From: "Richard B Gosling" <Gosling_Richard_B@perkins.com>
To: "goalie_john" <goalie_john@yahoo.co.uk>; "spitfires"
<spitfires@autox.team.net>
Sent: Tuesday, November 28, 2000 3:38 PM
Subject: Re: warning light and alternator


> John,
>
> I would agree that 16.9V sounds too much.  The cause of this is almost
>  certainly the alternator - this is all the more likely because you took a
>  working, used one, rather than a reconditioned (i.e. good-as-new) item.
If I
>  understand it right, the alternator generates voltage proportional to the
>  speed of the engine; it is then corrected to the desired output by some
>  electronics in the back of it, which also converts the electicity
generated
>  from AC to DC.  If you are generating that high a voltage, I would
suspect the
>  electronics in the back of your alternator are dodgy.  It will work, but
it
>  will damage components due to overheating over time.  I'm also not sure
what
>  the effect will be on your battery of having that high a voltage across
it for
>  a sustained period - it might overheat the battery.  Have a feel of the
>  battery casing after a long run.
>
> As for the coil, this is a cylindrical thing that is bolted onto the
bulkhead
>  near the battery, with a connection at each side of the end, and one from
the
>  middle of the end.  This generates the very high voltage needed to make a
>  spark in your spark plugs.  There are actually two coils inside it.  The
first
>  is connected to the live supply from the battery.  It is then earthed,
via a
>  switch in the distributor.  The coil has electricity passing through it,
which
>  builds a large magnetic field within the coil.  At the crucial moment,
the
>  distributor opens the switch to earth, so no more current can pass; the
>  magnetic field immediately collapses.  This sudden change in magnetic
field
>  strength creates a current in the second winding, with a very much higher
>  voltage.  The current is very low, but that's OK.  The current flows
along the
>  HT (high tension, which actually means high voltage) lead to the top of
the
>  distributor, which sends it to one of the spark plugs, and this current
leaps
>  across the spark plug gap to cause the spark.  The distributor then
>  re-connects the LT (low tension, i.e. low voltage) side of the coil, to
build
>  the magnetic field once more.
>
> This can cause poor running at high revs because, if the first winding is
>  dodgy, it may not have time to build much of a magnetic field at high
revs
>  (the faster the engine, the less time there is between sparks).  There
will
>  therefore not be much of a current generated in the HT circuit, so the
spark
>  at the plug will be weak.  However, this is but one of a number of causes
of
>  poor high speed running - timing out, centrifugal advance on the
distributor
>  (which makes the spark earlier at high speeds, to give the petrol more
time to
>  burn) not working, partial fuel blockage, weak fuel pump, mixture
incorrectly
>  set on carbs for starters.  My instinct is that electical drain is not
the
>  most likely cause of your high speed running problem, but is competely
>  separate, or is simply paranoia as you said!
>
> Well, that may be more than you wanted to know about coils, but you did
ask!
>
> Richard and Daffy


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