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Join Date: Jul 2021
Posts: 634
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Cam Sync Adaptor questions
Thinking about ignition solutions in between work-things.
1) For something like the Clewett cam sync adaptor, can it be installed with the engine still in the car, or do you need to pull the engine in order to drill the camshaft for the M5 bolt? 2) For something like the distributor cam sync modification, I'm assuming that they install a toothed gear with a missing tooth and a sensor in the dizzy (which spins at half speed, right?) to detect camshaft location. Is this accurate? 3) For a DIY solution, why has nobody stuck a hall-effect sensor in the (bored out) #1 spark plug hole of the distributor cap pointing down at the rotor and disabled the weights? Wouldn't this give you a home signal just like the dizzy mod? Is the pulse length too long to be useful (bad resolution?) for EFI ignition systems or something? (And if that's the case, why not just thin the rotor blade to solve it?) It seems like a fairly obvious solution but I've not heard of it ever used anywhere, and I'd figure "Replace your rotor and cap and there's your cam position sensor with zero effort" would be a major selling point. There's gotta be an obvious issue here that I'm missing. edit: Hell, for the DIY idea, why not just replace the rotor with a missing-tooth wheel instead of thinning the blade, and there you go. Why do you have to send your dizzy in to get worked on at all? Last edited by TeeJayHoward; 09-13-2022 at 10:34 AM.. |
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It's a 914 ...
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Ossining, NY
Posts: 4,728
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Will be curious what people have tried here. The synch/cam sensor position doesn't require the level of precision that the crank sensor does. As you say, it's more of a "home" signal that needs to occur within a range to distinguish the firing from non-firing stroke.
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Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Glorious Pac NW
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Quote:
Quote:
It'd be easier with the motor on a stand. But may well be enough room to do it, there's not a huge amount in the way.. Kind of a judgement call. Quote:
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'77 S with '78 930 power and a few other things. |
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Huh... So how does the ECU know the difference between the compression and exhaust strokes? Does it just trigger the coil during both strokes and count on the mixture being leaned out too much during the exhaust stroke for it to matter?
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It's a 914 ...
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Ossining, NY
Posts: 4,728
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For some setups, yes. It's called wasted spark. Older setups like Electromotive that only run a crank sensor used wasted spark. It's a fine setup for ignition only.
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Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Glorious Pac NW
Posts: 4,184
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Quote:
A modern ECU can certainly use the information if "knows" what stroke the cylinder is on. That's what cam sync is for. Wasted spark works fine. The factory used batch injection with the 3.2 Motronic, I believe. For either, ECU only needs to "know" where TDC is (which it can get from the "missing teeth"), not what stroke the cylinder is on. There are better ways to do it ~40 years on... Quote:
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'77 S with '78 930 power and a few other things. |
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