B
bakalorz
Guest
I'm going to put my comments in red, cause its otherwise hard to make multiple quotes in the middle of it all
I think you're both right, in that yes the dwell on the HEI module is adjusted by the bias on the W connector, but there is also dwell in relation to the pickup coil. I don't fully get the whole dwell thing, but I do see that both the W and pickup coil come into it.
Martin, when I hooked it up last night, I was connecting W to 12v like the points setup on Lou's page showed, so was this actually wrong and I should've left it disconnected?
No, that was the right way to do it. if W is connected to 12v its effectively not being used. when you use W to adjust the dwell its hooked into the input circuit somewhere.
The other thing I'm looking at now is the unconfirmed GS450 ignitor schematic.
I can't read the component values on there, but it seems they use a 1K resistor combined with maybe a 3.8K resistor, a zener diode, and maybe a 0.22uF capacitor to couple the pickup coil to the base of the transistor, and a 4.7K resistor is also used to connect to the collector.
I can't read it, so can't really comment much, what are the wire colors coming in representing. I got the impression the Zener is not on the input but providing a refrence voltage for something.
I do actually have some zener diodes, but I don't know what type they are or if that actually matters.
The zener value has to be right for it to do what it should, they are NOT interchangeable
Is it worthwhile trying this setup at all? I can't get my brain around how that should work though.
That looks like it is the whole igniter ... you would not use the HEI modules with it.
There is also the attached schematic the German fellow did that uses a 47K resistor in conjunction with a diode to couple the signal to the base of the transistor, and this one I can actually sort of comprehend.
I like the way he couples the signal in, its worth trying replacing the cap and 280 ohm resistor with a diode as he shows as an experiment
I'm not trying to second guess any of your ideas here either guys, I'm just trying to get my brain around it all and at the moment I'm not succeeding at all.
I am not familiar with the ignitior, I started reading the thread to learn more than anything else ... I only started commenting because I thought an Opamp was probably the wrong way to go ... I'm only guessing ... somewhat educated guesses, but just guesses.
I also now am thinking that my perceived need to invert the signal is actually not quite right.
For the positive going signal to fire a spark, it needs to turn the coil off, which means the transistor needs also to be off. Does that sound right?
So going just by the German fellow's circuit, normally T1 will be off and T2 will be on, meaning the coil will therefore be on.
I'm not sure ... His D3 and D4 allow the coil voltage to influence the base of the last transistor, so that may complicate things.
When the signal generator generates its tiny positive going signal and therefore raises the voltage slightly on the negative side of D1, this turns T1 on, thereby turning T2 off, and therefore firing a spark by turning the coil off again.
I imagine this is also the exact same theory behind your two transistor setup too Martin, so probably that's what I should've been trying.
With the two transistor amp, it should be biased so that normally Q4 is off, so that Q3 is on, so that the module is off.
when the signal generator generates its tiny positive going signal it turns Q4 on, turning Q3 off, turning the HEI and coils ON
When the signal generators tiny positive going signal stops, Q4 turns off again, Q3 on, and the HEI kills the current to the coils ... and then it sparks, as the tiny positive going signal ENDS
Sorry for my confusion here and if it's making you guys confused too...
