Ed is quite the stud muffin....
0 Members and 7 Guests are viewing this topic.
You will have to pardon me. I should be as dumb as a sack of hammers, with modern stuff.Are you dealing with the symptoms of coil over-saturation?
Maybe pull a spring or two and do some pressure testing. As suggested, maybe a smaller plug gap to see if that might help.Are there logs of the runs gettin broken up? I guess the tunerstudio will allow it to be seen if you are comfortable posting it. I guess you got the trans under control to do the shifts where you wanted? Keep up the good work on the wagon. It is looking GOOD!
Will this thing pull full rpm @ light load? There is a guy who I have known for yrs, although I am not involved in any way. I have walked around his truck. He buys complete motors and the builder has great support. It is a blown methanol big inch hemi. Above 2800 hp. About 55# boost. He runs a 10 amp magneto. Plug gap is .016-.018.One of my theories, coil over-sat is further aggravated by the inability to empty the previous charge due to high resistance. No proof.I have a V8 air compressor. The pass side head is a 2-cycle air pump. 302 Ford. 100 cfm @ 100psi. The distributor is oem V8, with 8 trigger events for the remaining 4 cyl. If the 4 unused plug wires are not grounded the motor will be unable to take load and run smooth. It will break up before the governed 3200 rpm.All of this to get here. If reducing plug gap does not allow some amount of higher rpm, I would look at a component issue. Probably where you are/have been already.On a note, I would like to see you get away from increasing the voltage to your coils. Voltage does no work. The current from 12v @6 amps is exactly equal to 7amps @ 10.28 volts. Every 12v points ignition car ever produced was resisted down to 6-7 volts to the coil. My street car in 1971 went 9k rpm w/single points and single coil. Modified Production cars ran 1/4 mi w/6.50 gear and ran dual points/2 coils and reduced voltage to everything.If you do not have @ 6 amps minimum to all coils, I would not expect another solution. If your Mean Effective Pressure is not exceptionally high, you should not need more than 6a.JMO
"Yes it will go to 6000 rpm with a light load." Good. You may or may not be into valve float. The OEM saw fit to install 85# springs on motors with hp peak of 4400 rpm. Most will go 5800-6000. Run smooth. They are probably in valve float at 5k. "he has seen lifters jump the lobe on cams with xfi lobes and not enough spring pressure." You are describing lofting. I stopped using spring pressure to control lofting years ago and I was late to the party. "Said he tore one down with a broken cam. I can imagine there's quite a bit of force on the cam with a lifter landing on the backside of the lobe."If the cam broke, it is flat tappet. I have commented on the quality of cam cores here. Probably a Comp."I could be completely wrong with today's ignition systems, but my understanding is that today's coils operate on battery system voltage" I will try one more time. You will have battery voltage at the starter. The same voltage can be found at your interior courtesy light. One needs 300+amps, the other needs 0.01amps. Swapping the two power sources will not work. Just because you have battery voltage to your coils, do you have 300+ amps or 0.01 amps? You said the coils were cold to the touch. If I had issues running and the coils were cold, I would verify proper current availability. Coils do not care about voltage at the supply."and the computer controls the dwell time (we're taking milli-seconds) in between discharge cycles."Computers require voltage not amperage. I have the ability and tools to measure the quality (intensity and duration) of the spark and plug resistance on running engines. Sounds like you are talking about (C)apacitive (D)ischarge ignition. CD ignitions can present serious problems. "a waste spark manner like the stock system,"Forget everything I said about the inability to empty the coil charge.