The Aprilia had it at 140/90 for peak at around 13,000.
Any earlyer and the carbs go to shit, any later and it looses all the mid.
Early closing at say 85 looses all the overev.
Ive got a thing thats unique and new.To prove it I'll have the last laugh on you.Cause instead of one head I got two.And you know two heads are better than one.
Thanks for info.
I´m just sold to the stability of PVL, solid like a tank, never fails.(well, not yet)
And the curve seems to fit my engine just perfectly now after activating the exhaustports.(had them locked open before).
I have a perfect flat torque powerband that´s about 3500rpm wide.
And by that i want to give the PVL 458/4000 some more chances.
I dunno, but i ordered some silver sparkplugs just to minimize losses in spark.
Maybe a pluglead with silvercore could help also.
Dunno if even exists thou.
Rgds.
Patrick
Shift the housing.
anybody looking for a cheap DIY programable ignition ?
I searched the entire net (in english) for one I could understand/built/program myself, but no luck finding one that ticked all the boxes.
until I once searched in french, and bingo
all that is needed are :
arduino nano
ibgt
hall sensor
and if you use an arduino clone, a voltage regulator.
http://a110a.free.fr/SPIP172/article...id_article=142
depending on the Hall-sensor you use, can be made for under 20 euro, easy to built and easy to program
the 1GT101DC is quite expensive, but I found one that is almost identical and works, for about half the price : http://m.littelfuse.com/~/media/elec...asheet.pdf.pdf
mine worked in a testing setup today
inner tube arrounfd the box to cover the USB plug (just prototyping)
softare (arduino file) is ready, just copy-paste. there are 4 parameters to enter (dwell-type, hall-sensor type, ° of sensor compared to TDC and nr of cylinders)
then there are 2 lines one for rpm and one for the corresponding ° of advance. one can have infinite setup-points. just change the points, plug-in the usb cable and in less than a minute you have a new curve in the box
if anybody needs help with hte french, just ask![]()
Not on our kart tracks. A Suzuki RG with std parts will fail if shown much over 13000. But clearly better parts will extend things considerably.
17? Heck that's well out of my experience but I built way too conservative. Blowdown for those revs would be hard to get close to ideal.
Don't you look at my accountant.
He's the only one I've got.
This is as close as I'll ever get to making a contribution to this amazing thread.
See below, may be of interest to two stroke fans in the mainland.
Not a bad two stroke engineer that Mike Sinclair.......
That is a neat, simple, bit of gear, and by the look of it, very effective.
(And, more importantly, within my technical capabilities).
Pity I bailed on French in 8th grade. Je ne peux pas lire le français pour les noix.
Help with the translation would be appreciated.
Cheers, Daryl.
That's interesting, though it's worth noting that it's an inductive ignition, not a CD. I've never found an inductive system that will pass my crude ignition performance test ie. the ability to consistently fire a surface gap plug.
But I still think this programmable circuit could be very useful when used as a trigger for an automotive CDI box, thus combining a tunable advance curve with a very high energy ignition output. I've been using automotive boxes (eg Mallory 6864M) on bikes for the last couple of years and they'll happily fire a surface gap plug that's been dipped in the grease bucket but they generally rely on external timing control.
Most automotive CDIs provide multiple sparks to around 3000rpm with a 4 stroke V8, or around 12000rpm with a 2 stroke single. The multiple sparks sound like a squeak rather than a crack when the plug fires, and I noticed that I could hear this happening when I triggered a spark even when the plug was screwed into the head.
I never thought much about the noise until I came across this on another forum:
I think this method of assessing spark output might actually have some merit. Looking at the spark doesn't tell you anything and scope traces are subject to interpretation. But I've found that the systems that will happily fire a surface gap plug swimming in methanol and oil (and even some water if I haven't purged the engine properlyAbout 25 years ago I noticed the cars with the spectacular nitrous eruptions, scoops in low earth orbit, etc. had canister coils, mostly the Blaster 2. The cars with HEI coil-in-cap systems didn’t have the problem. This is with CD boxes driving the coils in all cases. Even stock HEI systems had fewer problems than CD with the can coils.
For $hits and giggles I compared several coils with a dB meter by using a plastic tube with the meter at one end and various plug gaps at the other, using a 6A box triggered by an MSD tester. The loudest was the big HVC coil, the second was the cheap $16 Tru-Tech, which oddly enough was louder than the high-dollar version of the same application. Canister coils are bunk and the worst was the little tiny HVC coils.
While doing this I also looked at the wave forms with an oscilloscope and the E core coils have longer arc duration.
Applied rocket science suggests the spark with the most energy will make the loudest sound.
The HEI type coil has a much larger core, the “E” core”, around the bobbin than a canister type coil. The core stores and transfers magnetic energy from the primary to the secondary winding so it’s no surprise the coil with the most material in the core has the most energy in the spark. Who would have thought?) also make the most noise. The best coil I've found is the big FD478 Ford coil, which is also commonly sold (with a fancy anodized housing and a higher price) as a "performance" coil by Crane and others.
I built an arduino based time-speed-distance display that used a hall sensor on the front wheel. Didn't think the arduino would be fast enough to keep up with the crank.
I see several floats in the code. I had to go to some length to keep floats out of any calculation done within the interrupt and in the end changed most decimals to fixed point to keep the cycles down.
How about this. https://speeduino.com/wiki/index.php/Overview
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