Did you finally get it past the post office nazi's Mark? Should I be standing by my mail-box batting away interlopers who would covet this ignition, like Charlie and Geoff? ha ha, Cheers, Terry.
Yes!
I sent it Monday. I'm hoping you'll get it this week.
When you do, here's what I suggest:
If you have old points installed, try it first with the condensors still attached. This will help suppress the tendency to have multiple short sparks prior to the "real" spark that would otherwise happen if the points are burnt.
If you have new points, try it with the condensors disconnected.
You will have to push the little ground lug in through the points' grommet, because I already crimped it onto the ground wire when I tested it here. Pick a screw in the points plate and ground it there.
You might have to change the connectors on the ends of your bike's harness at the junctions, so I sent extra connectors. If you change both the ones from the coils to the points and the ones from the points to the coils, they can swap back and forth with or without the I-ignition (that's what I'm thinking of registering as the name of it: "I-ignition", since it was developed on the Internet.
The black wire and it's 3-way junction should plug into the double-coil (Honda) female connector under the tank, but it may distort the connector somewhat on that side. This will leave you with 1 new larger female bullet and one Honda, so you may have to change one on a Dyna coil. If your Dynas are like mine, they have a 1/4" wide flat connector on them, so you could make a little jumper from that to the new male bullet, using that with the ignition module.
Install the module from the left side of the bike: there should be room to work under there.
Let me know how it goes. I am particularly interested in the performance under load at higher RPM. I haven't tried that with my bike (it's still iced in), so let me know if it's steady or if it stumbles. There will probably be multiple sparks at low RPM, which you will not notice, which should drop out around 3000-4000 RPM. If they remain, there may be sputtering above 5500 RPM or so, so watch for that.