I have a nice happy dwell meter, and I like to use it to set my points. My dwell meter only has settings for either 6 or 8 cylinder engines. Lets assume I am using this on my trusty mid-1970's SOHC CB750, which we all know is a four-cylinder engine with two sets of points and a single-lobed points cam.
Normally, I will statically set the dwell with a feeler gauge, double check, and then use the dwell meter to dynamically ensure that both sets of points the exact same while the engine is running. It does this just fine, yielding splendid results.
However, I would like to correctly measure and record my points dwell angle for future reference/ other applications. I could just look at the eight-cylinder engine reading and record that number, but like I said, I would like to record the correct angle. This has been bugging me forever. Every time I think I have it figured out I start thinking myself backwards into a box. I am pretty sure that as far as the dwell meter cares, one points lobe = one cylinder.
The real questions here are:
(1) Am I correct in thinking that, as far as the dwell meter cares, the number of lobes on the points cam is equal to the number of cylinders of the engine?
(2) What then is the math to obtain the correct angular dwell readings for my CB750 (a "single cylinder engine") when measuring with my happy old 6 or 8 cylinder dwell meter?
I believe that when I am checking one set of points on my CB750, I might as well pretend that it is a single-cylinder motor. If this is correct, then to obtain the corrected dwell angle I could take the 8-cylinder reading and multiply this times eight (or the six cylinder number and multiply it by six). For example, if the dwell meter indicates 22 degrees of dwell in the eight-cylinder mode, then I would multiply this by eight disclosing a corrected 176 degrees of dwell. (22*8=176)
Does this sound correct?
peace and grease,
fang