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Electronic Ignition?

 
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cpayne(at)joimail.com
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PostPosted: Mon Jun 28, 2010 2:33 pm    Post subject: Electronic Ignition? Reply with quote

Sooo, when all you guys install either Barry's or Mark's electronic ignition, throw them old magnetos my way so I can "recycle" them...

Craig Payne


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mark.bitterlich(at)navy.m
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PostPosted: Tue Jun 29, 2010 6:56 am    Post subject: Electronic Ignition? Reply with quote

Sadly no. The design I am contemplating uses the old mag case and
rotating pieces. It will not use the existing mag coil that is getting
so hard to find. I am trying to apply the KISS principle. I also am
not a design engineering "team" and this is one of those "get around to
it" projects. However, it should have a terrifically strong spark,
multiple discharge at idle, backup (ignition) starting ability if the
"shower of sparks // Booster coil" system fails, easy to service and
replace and cheap.

The down side is that I have to make sure the existing internal high
voltage components of the original mag (cap, rotor, cigarette) will be
able to hold up to about twice the high voltage that they are carrying
now. In order to test that off an aircraft, I have to modify a
distributor spinning machine to accept this mag, and then operate it
with test equipment applied to look for internal breakdown.

I'm collecting old mags myself. Smile

Mark


--


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dougsappllc(at)gmail.com
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PostPosted: Tue Jun 29, 2010 7:54 am    Post subject: Electronic Ignition? Reply with quote

Mark,Sounds like you have excluded the coil from the system but just for conversation sake I have contracted with a US company to produce a run of 350 coils, these coils will fit both the Russian and Chinese mags.


I have dual Light Speed units on on my cub with a back up battery and have yet to find a down side to the installation, no moving parts, hotter spark, more power, and much lighter weight.   This all begs the question WHY don't we have something like this for the radial engines?


Doug

On Tue, Jun 29, 2010 at 7:55 AM, Bitterlich, Mark G CIV Det Cherry Point, MALS-14 64E <mark.bitterlich(at)navy.mil (mark.bitterlich(at)navy.mil)> wrote:
[quote]--> Yak-List message posted by: "Bitterlich, Mark G CIV Det Cherry Point, MALS-14 64E" <mark.bitterlich(at)navy.mil (mark.bitterlich(at)navy.mil)>

Sadly no.  The design I am contemplating uses the old mag case and
rotating pieces.  It will not use the existing mag coil that is getting
so hard to find.  I am trying to apply the KISS principle.  I also am
not a design engineering "team" and this is one of those "get around to
it" projects.  However, it should have a terrifically strong spark,
multiple discharge at idle, backup (ignition) starting ability if the
"shower of sparks // Booster coil" system fails, easy to service and
replace and cheap.

The down side is that I have to make sure the existing internal high
voltage components of the original mag (cap, rotor, cigarette) will be
able to hold up to about twice the high voltage that they are carrying
now.  In order to test that off an aircraft, I have to modify a
distributor spinning machine to accept this mag, and then operate it
with test equipment applied to look for internal breakdown.

I'm collecting old mags myself.  Smile

Mark


--


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talew(at)bellsouth.net
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PostPosted: Tue Jun 29, 2010 8:08 am    Post subject: Electronic Ignition? Reply with quote

Doug,
Let us know when you get the coils .
Terry


From: doug sapp <dougsappllc(at)gmail.com>
To: yak-list(at)matronics.com
Sent: Tue, June 29, 2010 11:50:15 AM
Subject: Re: Electronic Ignition?

Mark, Sounds like you have excluded the coil from the system but just for conversation sake I have contracted with a US company to produce a run of 350 coils, these coils will fit both the Russian and Chinese mags.


I have dual Light Speed units on on my cub with a back up battery and have yet to find a down side to the installation, no moving parts, hotter spark, more power, and much lighter weight. This all begs the question WHY don't we have something like this for the radial engines?


Doug

On Tue, Jun 29, 2010 at 7:55 AM, Bitterlich, Mark G CIV Det Cherry Point, MALS-14 64E <mark.bitterlich(at)navy.mil (mark.bitterlich(at)navy.mil)> wrote:
[quote]--> Yak-List message posted by: "Bitterlich, Mark G CIV Det Cherry Point, MALS-14 64E" <mark.bitterlich(at)navy.mil (mark.bitterlich(at)navy.mil)>

Sadly no. The design I am contemplating uses the old mag case and
rotating pieces. It will not use the existing mag coil that is getting
so hard to find. I am trying to apply the KISS principle. I also am
not a design engineering "team" and this is one of those "get around to
it" projects. However, it should have a terrifically strong spark,
multiple discharge at idle, backup (ignition) starting ability if the
"shower of sparks // Booster coil" system fails, easy to service and
replace and cheap.

The down side is that I have to make sure the existing internal high
voltage components of the original mag (cap, rotor, cigarette) will be
able to hold up to about twice the high voltage that they are carrying
now. In order to test that off an aircraft, I have to modify a
distributor spinning machine to accept this mag, and then operate it
with test equipment applied to look for internal breakdown.

I'm collecting old mags myself. Smile

Mark
--


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mark.bitterlich(at)navy.m
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PostPosted: Tue Jun 29, 2010 8:08 am    Post subject: Electronic Ignition? Reply with quote

I think it is mainly a matter of "volume". If you can convince Light
Speed to make a system for our 9 cylinder arrangement (and that is the
real issue in design) then they would be a much better source than what
I am contemplating!

I did not know that you had contracted to have a run of coils made. NEW
INFO! This might move my project to the FAR back burner as I have no
desire to re-invent the wheel.

No matter what kind of system that is used, you are always going to need
some kind of trigger. Since this is a geared engine, it is going to be
a little bit difficult to get that off any external moving parts, such
as is the case with car engine crank triggers that are usually attached
in some way to the harmonic balancer, etc. I am guessing that even
Light Speed is going to have problems in that regard, unless they custom
design something that goes into the holes where the mags USED to go.
That, by the way, is the exact problem I am having... Because no one
wants to do that level of design, at that kind of expense, for the small
market we appear to represent. That is why my starting design continues
to use the M9 mag case. Actually the CJ-6 mag case would work just as
well. Advance mechanisms can be retained or removed.

Bottom line, I don't think they are making it for us because we do not
appear to be a market they can make money from.

Mark


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gill.g(at)gpimail.com
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PostPosted: Tue Jun 29, 2010 8:52 am    Post subject: Electronic Ignition? Reply with quote

Doug,

Light Speed take timing directly off the engine crank, Housia and M14s don’t have a convenient take off point. I worked with the guy in Australia who makes his own 9 cylinder radial complete with electronic ignition driven off the auxiliary. The problem was that it was too expensive, as I recall $2000 to replace both mags. The system will fit in place of one mag. It had two Hall sensors taking off the same point to assure that spark was synchronized.

Gill

From: owner-yak-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-yak-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of doug sapp
Sent: Tuesday, June 29, 2010 8:50 AM
To: yak-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Electronic Ignition?


Mark,
Sounds like you have excluded the coil from the system but just for conversation sake I have contracted with a US company to produce a run of 350 coils, these coils will fit both the Russian and Chinese mags.



I have dual Light Speed units on on my cub with a back up battery and have yet to find a down side to the installation, no moving parts, hotter spark, more power, and much lighter weight. This all begs the question WHY don't we have something like this for the radial engines?



Doug


On Tue, Jun 29, 2010 at 7:55 AM, Bitterlich, Mark G CIV Det Cherry Point, MALS-14 64E <mark.bitterlich(at)navy.mil (mark.bitterlich(at)navy.mil)> wrote:
--> Yak-List message posted by: "Bitterlich, Mark G CIV Det Cherry Point, MALS-14 64E" <mark.bitterlich(at)navy.mil (mark.bitterlich(at)navy.mil)>

Sadly no. The design I am contemplating uses the old mag case and
rotating pieces. It will not use the existing mag coil that is getting
so hard to find. I am trying to apply the KISS principle. I also am
not a design engineering "team" and this is one of those "get around to
it" projects. However, it should have a terrifically strong spark,
multiple discharge at idle, backup (ignition) starting ability if the
"shower of sparks // Booster coil" system fails, easy to service and
replace and cheap.

The down side is that I have to make sure the existing internal high
voltage components of the original mag (cap, rotor, cigarette) will be
able to hold up to about twice the high voltage that they are carrying
now. In order to test that off an aircraft, I have to modify a
distributor spinning machine to accept this mag, and then operate it
with test equipment applied to look for internal breakdown.

I'm collecting old mags myself. Smile

Mark


--


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bwade154(at)yahoo.com
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PostPosted: Tue Jun 29, 2010 8:55 am    Post subject: Electronic Ignition? Reply with quote

Mark I've been using Champion plugs in two airplanes for three years no fouled plugs. The latest cars are using coil over plug technology just supply 12V at the proper time talk about redundancy nine set of points simple, or computer control with advance timing for RPM & power curve OHH YA. Do have an extra mag if yo send it back with KISS electronic ignition.


From: "Bitterlich, Mark G CIV Det Cherry Point, MALS-14 64E" <mark.bitterlich(at)navy.mil>
To: yak-list(at)matronics.com
Sent: Tue, June 29, 2010 10:55:34 AM
Subject: RE: Electronic Ignition?

--> Yak-List message posted by: "Bitterlich, Mark G CIV Det Cherry Point, MALS-14 64E" <mark.bitterlich(at)navy.mil (mark.bitterlich(at)navy.mil)>

Sadly no. The design I am contemplating uses the old mag case and
rotating pieces. It will not use the existing mag coil that is getting
so hard to find. I am trying to apply the KISS principle. I also am
not a design engineering "team" and this is one of those "get around to
it" projects. However, it should have a terrifically strong spark,
multiple discharge at idle, backup (ignition) starting ability if the
"shower of sparks // Booster coil" system fails, easy to service and
replace and cheap.

The down side is that I have to make sure the existing internal high
voltage components of the original mag (cap, rotor, cigarette) will be
able to hold up to about twice the high voltage that they are carrying
now. In order to test that off an aircraft, I have to modify a
distributor spinning machine to accept this mag, and then operate it
with test equipment applied to look for internal breakdown.

I'm collecting old mags myself. Smile

Mark
--


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dstroud(at)xplornet.com
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PostPosted: Tue Jun 29, 2010 12:52 pm    Post subject: Electronic Ignition? Reply with quote

It's just not that tough to do. Been there two times and retrofitted a four banger (Subaru),
single to dual electronic ignition and a six banger (Corvair ) , single points to dual electronic back
in my auto conversion days. Take a look here and see the poor boy method on the Corvair. Scroll down.
http://home.hiwaay.net/~langford/corvair/dstroud/ or here to see how a Compufire unit
feeds dual ignition to a highly modified (short stroke) vw :
http://www.eaa.org/experimenter/articles/2010-06_aeromorph75.asp

Here's how my Corvair got done. Yank out the points system and leave in the mechanical
auto advance pack. Make up a new flat plate to hold two ignition modules 180 degrees apart,
install a six cylinder reluctor (we gaffed one from an electronic Ford F-150). Each module fires
out to it's own coil, the coil output feeds an MSD coil joiner and that feeds the distributor, the
rotor in the distributor farts out the sparks to the appropriate cylinders.

M14's and Huosai's have the benefit of two mags being driven anyway into 18 plugs so no need for the coil joiner
parts. This system is dependent on having a live battery on board. No battery = you're now in a glider.

Could you possibly run one mag as usual and put the electronic in the other or retain a dedicated
emergency backup battery for ignition only if your stock battery went flat ?

David Stroud Ottawa, Canada
Christavia C-FDWS
Fairchild 51 replica
under construction C-FYXV

---


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bigdog(at)bentwing.com
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PostPosted: Tue Jun 29, 2010 2:07 pm    Post subject: Electronic Ignition? Reply with quote

Light Speed also has a Hall effect sensor that replaces a mag for Lycomings.

[quote] From: owner-yak-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-yak-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Gill Gutierrez
Sent: Tuesday, June 29, 2010 11:39 AM
To: yak-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: RE: Electronic Ignition?


Doug,

Light Speed take timing directly off the engine crank, Housia and M14s don’t have a convenient take off point. I worked with the guy in Australia who makes his own 9 cylinder radial complete with electronic ignition driven off the auxiliary. The problem was that it was too expensive, as I recall $2000 to replace both mags. The system will fit in place of one mag. It had two Hall sensors taking off the same point to assure that spark was synchronized.

Gill


[b]


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dstroud(at)xplornet.com
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PostPosted: Tue Jun 29, 2010 2:12 pm    Post subject: Electronic Ignition? Reply with quote

It shouldn't be that tough to do on the existing mags. Been there done that two times and retrofitted
a four banger (Subaru), single to dual electronic ignition and a six (Corvair ) , single points to dual
electronic back in my auto conversion days. Take a look here and see the poor boy method on the
Corvair. Scroll down. http://home.hiwaay.net/~langford/corvair/dstroud/ or here to see how a
Compufire unit feeds dual ignition to a highly modified (short stroke) vw :
http://www.eaa.org/experimenter/articles/2010-06_aeromorph75.asp

Here's how my Corvair got done. Yank out the points system and leave in the mechanical
auto advance pack. Make up a new flat plate to hold two ignition modules 180 degrees apart,
install a six cylinder reluctor (we gaffed one from an electronic Ford F-150). Each module fires
out to it's own coil, the coil output feeds an MSD coil joiner and that feeds the distributor, the
rotor in the distributor farts out the sparks to the appropriate cylinders.

M14's and Huosai's have the benefit of two mags being driven into 18 plugs already so no need for
the coil joiner parts. This system is dependent on having a live battery on board.
No battery = you're now in a glider.

Could you possibly run one mag as usual and put the electronic in the other or retain a dedicated
emergency backup battery for ignition only if your stock battery went flat and run two "electronic"
mags gutted out for the purpose ?

David Stroud Ottawa, Canada
Christavia C-FDWS
Fairchild 51 replica
under construction C-FYXV

---


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mark.bitterlich(at)navy.m
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PostPosted: Tue Jun 29, 2010 2:52 pm    Post subject: Electronic Ignition? Reply with quote

That is exactly the START of the idea I am working on. A multiple coil
system would indeed be a hot setup! The problem there is in complexity
and in component location. I have not solved those issues. Wish I
could. To keep it simple, I planned on using the original spark
distribution system, using of course new wires and auto plugs (Iridium
or otherwise), because the original spark plug wires won't stand up to
the spark voltage this system will generate. Speaking about plug gaps:
This system would easily support plug gaps up to .045 My research has
so far implied that the actual mechanism of the mags we are using now
are FAIRLY reliable, although I have had two cases of internal gear
failure. These seem to be unusual though, and were probably due to an
actual engine issue! I am looking at putting a Hall Effect sensor into
the mag to replace the points, but .... The points themselves would
indeed work to get things up and running quickly. You see, what I am
looking at here is a simple kit that you can buy yourself (not
necessarily from me by the way.. But totally on your own) and install it
yourself. It's not rocket science. At least, I hope not.

Mark
--


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dsavarese0812(at)bellsout
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PostPosted: Tue Jun 29, 2010 2:58 pm    Post subject: Electronic Ignition? Reply with quote

Ironically, there IS a solid state ignition system for radial engines. Just not OUR radial engines. The company in Australia, Rotec, who builds the two small radials (7 and 9 cylinder) manufactures an electronic ignition for their engines. They have expressed ZERO interest in OEM'ing their 9 cylinder units which could be easily adapted to our engines.
Dennis

[quote] ---


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gill.g(at)gpimail.com
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PostPosted: Tue Jun 29, 2010 3:40 pm    Post subject: Electronic Ignition? Reply with quote

Yes the problem with our engines is that they are geared props rather than direct drive, so you can’t mount the sensor on the prop shaft for timing. M14 has different gearing as compared to the Housia. The Light Speed uses a wasted spark system and times directly off the crank.

Gill

From: owner-yak-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-yak-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Greg
Sent: Tuesday, June 29, 2010 12:57 PM
To: yak-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: RE: Electronic Ignition?



Light Speed also has a Hall effect sensor that replaces a mag for Lycomings.
Quote:



From: owner-yak-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-yak-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Gill Gutierrez
Sent: Tuesday, June 29, 2010 11:39 AM
To: yak-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: RE: Electronic Ignition?
Doug,

Light Speed take timing directly off the engine crank, Housia and M14s don’t have a convenient take off point. I worked with the guy in Australia who makes his own 9 cylinder radial complete with electronic ignition driven off the auxiliary. The problem was that it was too expensive, as I recall $2000 to replace both mags. The system will fit in place of one mag. It had two Hall sensors taking off the same point to assure that spark was synchronized.

Gill


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dstroud(at)xplornet.com
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PostPosted: Wed Jun 30, 2010 5:33 am    Post subject: Electronic Ignition? Reply with quote

Does anyone on the list have a baffed out Huosai mag they are willing to sell? Hopefully
complete but worn components ok. There was a lad on this list I sold a Huosai engine
core to a few years back to replace his cracked block....any mags left over from that one ?
Thanks.

David Stroud Ottawa, Canada
Christavia C-FDWS
Fairchild 51 replica
under construction C-FYXV


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