
can anyone let me have one of these please, a damaged one is fine, most of them have the tabs broken, we are just trying to figure exactly what it does and how
many thanks for looking
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937carrera wrote:I understand where you are coming from.....as the unit simply introduces a reversible "negative delay" to the ignition timing why would there be a need for more than one type of unit when the same 3 wires are being used ?
Either...... internal component development, same function, different bits
or varying limits of the range of timing adjustments
or varying timing response profile taking account the behaviour of other mechanical components like camshaft profile
or something else
I hope you get one and have success in your investigations
Negative delay? It advances the timing to keep the idle speed stable when it drops below the set threshold, the different types have different idle speeds and maximum advance.937carrera wrote:I understand where you are coming from.....as the unit simply introduces a reversible "negative delay" to the ignition timing why would there be a need for more than one type of unit when the same 3 wires are being used ?
tobydog wrote:Or, it has an inline/inbuilt delay which it can reduce to `advance' the timing?
silverbullet wrote:FWIW, I cannot see how it is possible to "advance" spark timing events with passive components, only mechanical centrifugal or vacuum advance devices can do this.
A triggered event cannot occur before the trigger time!
The only way to do it electronically would be to use mapped timing, but that didnt come along until much later for production cars.
I suspect that it is a simple digital delay device, which somehow looks at the Hall sensor trigger event intervals and has a delay time only slightly less than this interval, thereby "advancing" the timing a few ms for the next spark...
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