[dsn_klr650] spark plugs, resistor/nonresistor
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- Joined: Mon Jul 31, 2000 11:12 am
[dsn_klr650] spark plugs, resistor/nonresistor
Now I am definitely no expert in this area so the rambling that follows is
just so I can see my text on the list.
I realize that resistor type plugs cut spark intensity but how does this
equate to inefficiency? I have often looked at it this way. I could hook
up a haphazard voltage source (that you might find on a KLR) to a circuit
with no inline resistance to perform some function say light a bulb. Now
the bulb in this case is obviously a type of resistor but lets ignore that
point! SO I turn on the power and the bulb lights very brightly but I notice
that it is not regulated well in that it seems to dim and flicker but is
still quite intense overall (intense but inefficient). I decide that while
this bulb burns brightly it is annoying to have the inconsistency of a
brightly flickering light (I cannot rely on a reproducible effect).
Something in the circuit (be it power supply or wiring) is allowing these
surges in energy and if I found just the right inline resistor to hold the
bottom end (or a compromising middle end) of those surges I might get a more
consistent lighting effect thus extending the life of the bulb and
decreasing the inefficiency of the circuit's primary function. Given that, I
can now always perform my job under a "constant" (light source in this case
but how about spark for a plug) so that any thing I do (or anything I do to
my KLR) is unrelated to the prior inefficiency.
To extend the analogy, I would now have a plug (the resistor plug) that
fires a slightly less intense spark but with much less variable magnitude.
Now, I don't know how well voltage is regulated to the plug in the KLR but
the resistor type plug could even things out in terms of the reproducibility
of the sparks intensity. This would lend itself to easier fine tuning else
where when considering the overall inefficiency of the engine. But, in a
thumper spark variability may not be a big deal in overall tuning.
What do I know? I deal with human performance not engine performance!
Chuck
A14
i read the following in an article by some SandiaLabs scientists (full
article available on http://www.directhits.com/AdvAutoIgnSys.asp
**********************************************************************
It is useful to model the circuits and compare the energy transferred to the
spark with varying amounts of resistance in the high voltage section of the
circuit. Figure 1 shows a schematic of a typical capacitor discharge
ignition system. Representative parameters for conventional and three
different power enhanced ignitions are shown in TABLE 1. Note that
Conventional ignition circuits have high resistance in the secondary side,
often as much as 25 K ohms, which limits transfer efficiency to the spark to
around 0.2%.
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