it might be true that it is an urban myth.
as i read (over the years, in various forums),
Clearly you have been more succesful than me in finding other sources. I have knowledge of only one forum - for light pleasure aircraft - but that particular post was withdrawn later. The poster was identified by a member in this forum as the same person that has spread the theory of a longer spark duration in this here forum. It goes without saying I am interested to read what
you have read.
the resistor is supposed to spread out the current flow over some more time, allowing for a longer duration of the spark, instead of a very sharp and instantaneous peak current, you supposedly have a longer 'plateau' current. sounds reasonable to me, but dont know if this holds up. [...]
What you describe here, fits the difference monitored in reality (!) between a CDI and a conventional or a non CDI EI. Some bikes benefit from CDI, some don't and there are bikes where it makes no difference.
As I see it, the combustion process in our oldfashioned engines is so utterly,
utterly primitive that it will be quite a challenge to monitor a
significant difference in performance when resistance in the secundary circuit is altered. As always I'm open to learn something new, but for now I stick with the advice NGK and Honda mechanics have given me. I've concluded that Canada must have had other legislation than elsewhere and I don't rule out batches that had that same noise suppression have been shipped to US and EU.
My gut feeling is that differences in gap at the sparkplug's electrodes will give much,
much more effect.
If you want to be sure you have enough spark duration, stick to the standard, by Honda prescribed gap, if you look for a somewhat higher voltage in the initial peak voltage, you may experiment with a slightly wider gap.
Here is a question for the experts. In particular CB500/550s are known to easily foul their sparkplugs at idle. What - in theory - would make these CB
Fours idle better: an electrode gap of 0,6mm or 0,7mm? Please motivate your answer.