Well I'll have to bow to your expertise Lloyd, how more efficient would you say a points ignition was?
I don't need or want you to bow, Terry. I'd like you to understand the technical matters.
I don't know the duty cycle or dwell of a Martek ignition trigger. Do you? Please relay for analysis.
The Dyna I learned about from Hondaman. IIRC it has a duty cycle of about 270 degrees out of 360. Meaning each coil is powered 270/360 or about 75% of the time, this is more than a points cam allows the points to be closed, which is 190/360, or about 53%. The difference is that the dyna feeds power to the coils 22% more than what the points cam dictates.
So, the dyna trigger device is actually 22% less efficient than the stock system. This could be justified if it could be proven that this 22% somehow translated to MPG or HP increases. I've seen no data to support this.
Further, 3 ohm coils draw more power than 5 ohm coils. This is another added energy draw from the system. on the order of 40%. Again, with no HP or MPG improvement numbers, this is wasted energy consumption.
Are you saying that a fat blue spark like the one in the pic outside of a combustion chamber would be somehow humbled by a typically much weaker spark from a points ignition inside the combustion chamber, due to some science that we're not aware of?
I can't explain why you aren't aware of the science. I'm saying the fat blue spark you see outside the combustion chamber simply does not occur inside the combustion chamber, as it is a different environment, and the spark plug gap is far shorter than what you've depicted in the posted pic.
Do you set your spark plug gaps to 0.250 inch? The way the coils and plugs work, is to raise the voltage to a point where the spark gap can be ionized and form a low resistance plasma channel. That's when current can flow and this event largely depletes further voltage build up within the spark gap. In short, large voltages required to jump the 1/4 inch gap you show, just don't happen inside the combustion chamber, with gaps of .025 or even .035 inch gaps.
How many more BHP do you think a bike with a points ignition makes over one with an electronic ignition, producing a much stronger spark?
Given no other changes outside of spark voltages, I expect it to have the same BHP, unless other mods are also made.
How many more dollars does it cost to run a bike with an electronic ignition, even if it's worked perfectly in Geeto's bike for 20 years?
1- It hasn't worked perfectly, it's worked acceptably, imo. Is he claiming HP and MPG improvements? The Dyna is a 40 + year old inferior design that's being sales milked by marketing efforts. Have you seen a new improved design from Dyna in the last 40 years? Have electronic devices not improved in the last 40 years?
2- As far as dollars, it wasn't obtained for free was it?
3- I have point sets that are more than 20 years old on more than one bike that get near 50 MPG. Apart from the minor inconvenience of periodic point reconditioning, where electronic has a clear advantage. I don't see how electronic would improve on that. I'm clearly getting a good combustion burn with original components.
Is the government somehow reducing the available power in modern motorcycles by insisting that manufacturers only install inefficient electronic ignitions? Is there a conspiracy that we should all be aware of? Do tell!
Well, that seems to have taken a bit of a silly bent. Please tell us the passage where Big G as mandated electronic ignitions. Perhaps a more solid straw man can be rendered.
But, if you look into e ignition systems as a whole on modern vehicles, you'll find a far different total system than the baby step units offered for our SOHC4s.
As our technical "Expert" (and we all know what that means.......) I'm expecting a full report from you Lloyd, so get to it, no more questions, just answers please!
Not sure you'd accept any answers I give you. And, I'm not really interested in trading insults with you today. Anyway, you are the one proposing E trigger ignitions are of great benefit. Why isn't the onus on you to support the assertion with factual reasons why?
However, I am surprised you even bother with an SOHC4 at all, as the sum of the era's technology is far inferior to modern offerings. And a minuscule switch to an e ignition trigger device is not going to change the nature of the machine's combustion into modern equivalence.
G'Day!