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Why Do Twin Plug Engines Use Two Distributors?
I have a question about twin plug 911 engines.
Why do they need a 12-way distributor (as in the RSR) or two 6-way distributors (as in the 964)? Both plugs for a given cylinder fire at the same time, right? So why can't they be fired by the same distributor contact, using a 1-into-2 ("Y") sort of plug wire? I thought about this, the only answer I could come up with is maybe a single coil doesn't put out enough voltage to fire two plugs?
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How would you split the juice that forms the spark? The path of least resistance...One wire would always get the most juice. The coil(s) are another matter.
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John,
The major reason for that is that the spark will take the path of least resistance ie through only one plug. Tim edit: now it would be interesting if you could find a plug out there that doesn't ground to the engine but grounds to a second terminal. You could wire them in series that way but I doubt you'd find the right plugs for it.
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Tim 1973 911T 2005 VW GTI "Dave, hit the brakes, but don't look like your htting the brakes...what? I DON'T KNOW, BRAKE CASUAL!!!" dtw's thoughts after nearly rear ending a SHP officer Last edited by Tim Walsh; 01-16-2004 at 05:14 AM.. |
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We had a thread going about this last year right about this time...
THese guys are right... One plug or the other would spark, but not both.
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Chris ---------------------------------------------- 1996 993 RS Replica 2023 KTM 890 Adventure R 1971 Norton 750 Commando Alcon Brake Kits |
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Quote:
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wasted spark ignitions are different in the current path. In a normal distributor ignition system the spark goes through the spark plug into the engine and back to the ignition box. In a coilpack ignition the current path is into one plug into the engine, into the other plug and then back to the coil pack.. that way they only need half the amount of packs. because of the distributor you can't do that with a normal ignition system.
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Tim 1973 911T 2005 VW GTI "Dave, hit the brakes, but don't look like your htting the brakes...what? I DON'T KNOW, BRAKE CASUAL!!!" dtw's thoughts after nearly rear ending a SHP officer |
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Quote:
Wasted spark ignitions doesn't have any distributors. Every plug has it's own coil, but secondary windings are bi-filary winded on same coil. That means two secondary windings on same coil with only one primary. That way, you fire one coil and both plugs give spark, but each plug has it's own secondary...
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Goran,
What I meant was that you can't send the spark current through a 2nd plug when you have a distributor, only 1 wire at a time has a full path back to the ignition box. With coilpacks you can run the return through a differnt plug. hmm.. a diagram would be in order.
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Tim 1973 911T 2005 VW GTI "Dave, hit the brakes, but don't look like your htting the brakes...what? I DON'T KNOW, BRAKE CASUAL!!!" dtw's thoughts after nearly rear ending a SHP officer |
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Yupp...there are two different schools there, one with basically two secondaries for each plug and other with one bigger secondary that is grounded trough plugs on each end. Both work :-)
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UFLYICU
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The sparks occur at two different times, before and after the normal timing mark. This has the effect of a longer spark in the cylinder, which increases power and burns the mixture more efficiently (and, I would imagine, hotter). Racers use this setup often.
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Actually, wastespark coils aren't really wasting any spark when used on twin plug heads beacuse both sparks are going into same head, as they should. On the other hand, using wastespark coils on twin-plugged heads and ECU that is actually made for wastespark will actually waste sparks...effectivly firing four plugs at once... Getting complicated? :-)
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UFLYICU
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Thanks for the correction, I'll have to have a "talk" with my source.
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My english is not so good and i'm in hurry but I'll try to explain this quickly:
1. Twin plugging - ignition of mixture using two spark-plugs, usually positioned symetrically in the head. Twin-plugging is the (bandaid) way of solving problems of long burn time associated with having two valves per cylinder and one offset-positioned plug. Not used on engines with four valve heads and centrally positioned plug. With TP, mixture will be ignited from "two sides" simultaniously and flame front won't need to cover as much distance and whole sheebang will ignite (Observe: ignite, not detonate!) faster...which will allow you to run more advance and thus use more energy by allowing pressure to press pistons downwards longer time. 2. Direct fire - modern ignition that doesn't have any distrubutor. Used on almost all new cars. There is one coil per plug and all timing is done electronically, sending current to each coil when it's time to fire that particular plug. That way all mechanical stuff (dizzy, menchanical advance etc.) is removed and you have true solid-state system that is infinitely adjustable by software. 3. Wastefire - Direct fire with only two coils, but each firing two plugs. That way manufacturers will cut amount of wires in two. One cylinder will fire when it should and another during exhaust phase (when it actually doesn't matter). 4. Wastefire coils - looks like ordinary coil but it has two outputs and fires two plugs at once when energized. Plugs aren't connected in parallel but in series, with coil inbetween. 5. Using wastefire coils on dual-plugged engine with non-wastefire ECU (like using Motoronic on twin-plugged Porsche engine) - it looks like ordinary direct-fire system but instead of having one coil per plug you have one wastefire coil and two plugs per cylinder connected to each of six leads. ECU doesn't know there are two plugs, it just energizes wastefire coil instead of ordinary one and it fires two plugs simultaniously instead of one. 6. Using wastefire ECU with wastefire coils on single-plug engine (like using SDS on crochety original SC engine) - you have three wastefire coils and three leads from ECU...it will fire two plugs positioned in different cylinder at once. One of them will ignite mixture, other will do nothing. 7. Using wastefire ECU with wastefire coils on twin-plugged engine (SDS on twin-plugged 3.6 for instance) - Now it get's interesting. You have three leads coming out of ECU, each connected to two wastefire coils that are connected to two plugs each, effectively firing four plugs at once. Two will fire in on cylinder and do some good, other two will just fire and do nothing. Otherwise same as 6. 8. Dizzy - Mechanical device prone to failure, not used on new cars. It rotates and distributes high tension lead to each spark-plug on engine. That way, one coil will need to fire as many times as there are cylinders. When used in conjuction with twin-plugging (as in 3.6) you will have two coils and two dizzy's, connected together with a belt that snaps and turns your car into single-plugged one when you least expect it. Get the picture?
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Thank you for your time, Last edited by beepbeep; 01-16-2004 at 06:12 PM.. |
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Author of "101 Projects"
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There's a bunch of info on this in the Engine Rebuild book too...
-Wayne
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Wayne R. Dempsey, Founder, Pelican Parts Inc., and Author of: 101 Projects for Your BMW 3-Series 101 Projects for Your Porsche 911 How to Rebuild & Modify Porsche 911 Engines 101 Projects for Your Porsche Boxster & Cayman 101 Projects for Your Porsche 996 / 997 SPEED READ: Porsche 911 Check out our new site: Dempsey Motorsports |
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UFLYICU
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Well done, I appreciate the info.
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Gon fix it with me hammer
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cause 12plug distributors are a PITA to find
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It's very simple.
1. All 964/993 twin plug systems fire at exactly the same time. 2. Wastefire - as mentioned, plugs are in series so energy stored in coil field is divided between plugs 3. Ideal - two seperate coils to store energy for each plug and provides best ignition
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Have Fun Loren Systems Consulting Automotive Electronics '88 911 3.2 '04 GSXR1000 '01 Ducati 996 '03 BMW BCR - Gone |
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Ouch, my head hurts.
So it sounds like a waste fire system is a potential alternative ignition system when you twin plug a Motronic 3.2? You don't have to source the 964 dual distributor and expensive Andial splitter, or the even more expensive RSR distributor? I'm out of my depth, so apologies for the naive questions. I'm going to look in my copy of the Engine Book now.
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You need to have multiple coils for a wastefire system which is NOT
compatible with the 3.2 DME that has a single output. Like the Mercedes Benz or GM 6 cylinders, you'll need three coils and three DME timed outputs.
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Have Fun Loren Systems Consulting Automotive Electronics '88 911 3.2 '04 GSXR1000 '01 Ducati 996 '03 BMW BCR - Gone |
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