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That ignitor module (Read 192 times)
FinnHammer
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Re: That ignitor module
Reply #15 - 06/16/25 at 11:27:06
 
I just took a scope picture of one full cycle of ignition timing, and the result showed that the engine, cranked by the starter, (sparkplug removed) rotates at 5.868Hz (cycles per second) corresponding to 352 RPM.

Looking closer at the previous closeup of the timing peaks reveals that there is more like 16 mS between the peaks.

Calculating like before. I get the first peak to arrive 34deg before the other. If that last one is positioned 3 deg. before TDC as Mike has shown in his ignition curve thread, then it means that a stock system can time from 37deg. before TDC.
But it would not be difficult to mount small neodynium magnets exactly where they are desired to be, to place the trigger pulses at appropriate timing points.
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FinnHammer
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Re: That ignitor module
Reply #16 - 07/05/25 at 11:14:08
 
I am back here with a report about the Ignitors way of handling the ignition timing, during start and during driving.
And does it have a cut off function at 10K RPM?
There are 2 synchronization pulses coming into the module, one positive, one negative, and it was my theory that by applying 12V to the module via the black wire from the starter relay, the negative one of these pulses would be chosen to time the spark early. And when this voltage is removed as the starter relay is disengaged, then the ignitor picks the positive pulse as the timing reference.
Initially, this seemed like a trivial task to perform, but It was not. My function generator, although (or perhaps exactly because) it is an advanced one, could easily generate the required train of pulses, but only up to +- 10Volts, so I had to design a level shifter that could boost the output to +-31V, this voltage being the limit of my bench supply.
The picture here shows the schematic of the level shifter, with the floating battery driven gate driver supplies needed to make the 2 MosFets switch reliably.
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FinnHammer
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Re: That ignitor module
Reply #17 - 07/05/25 at 11:14:17
 
So far so good, I now have the circuit built on a makeshift breadboard, not pretty, but it works.
The test rig looks like this: It contains the level shifter, with the associated batteries, to the left. At the botton the +-31 volt supply is connected.
Top right is the terminal strip where the Ignitor module is connected, and the small square dot left of it is the switch which can supply 12V to the black wire.
Left of the rig is the 12V supply to the Module.
All in all 5 power supplies to perform this task.
(And at this point, I am still nervous that I shall fry the module when I turn the supplies on)
Top right in the picture is the high voltage probe, which will measure the voltage drop on a resistor that is acting as stand in for the ignition coil primary coil. At this point I am not interested in generating sparks with the associated high voltage ballihoo. I just need a voltage step indicating if the current through the ignitor is interrupted. This means that the voltage across th resistor will be 12V when the coil is charged, and it drops to 0V when the ignitor disconnects the coil.
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Re: That ignitor module
Reply #18 - 07/05/25 at 11:14:27
 
This scope picture shows the relevant waveforms for the test.
Yellow and cyan traces show the signals out of the function generator, the magenta trace shows the signal out of the level shifter. The level shifter not only boosts the voltage to +-31 volts, it also combines the 2 discrete pulses coming from the function generator.
When I took this picture the voltage was turned down to +- 10 volta, one cannot be too carefull.....
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Re: That ignitor module
Reply #19 - 07/05/25 at 11:14:37
 
The tests did not bring any usefull conclusions.
Even after reconfiguring the test bench to supply +-60V into the trigger input, did I manage to make the module respond to the trigger signal in an even remotely coherent manner.
The only exception being at 3000RPM, where it locked in and produced reliable trigger: and where there is enough time to establish a current through the coil for the successive firing.

It is true that my trigger signals are pure square waves, whereas the signal from the timing coil of the bike are more like sinusoidal. This may be the culprit, although it is beyond mee how a comparator can miss a fast pulse.
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Re: That ignitor module
Reply #20 - 07/05/25 at 11:14:50
 
But just as often it would go like this: No ringing, no spark.
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Re: That ignitor module
Reply #21 - 07/05/25 at 11:15:10
 
Then there were the most frequent response which would occour over the range of revs, like this totally erratic response.
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Re: That ignitor module
Reply #22 - 07/05/25 at 11:15:28
 
Just as a reminder, I made a mock up of a traditional points breaker ignition system: A 4.5mH coil (the flat disk which is a high voltage transformer coil I made a couple of years ago), a 300nF capacitor and a nice little switch (the black square thing) hooked across the capacitor, just like a breaker point.
This is what it looks like in hardware:
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Re: That ignitor module
Reply #23 - 07/05/25 at 11:15:39
 
When the switch is opened, and current stops flowing into it,  it is a property of a coil, that it will try to maintain this current flow. To this end, it induces a voltage large enough to do so, and with this voltage it drives a current into charging the capacitor, spending the magnetic field in it during the process. When the coil is demagnetized, it is the capacitors turn to act, and it discharges through the coil, depleting the energy it had stored, and building the magnetic field back in the coil. Only a bit of the energy is lost due to the resistance in the coil.
Like a seesaw, this goes on and on untill eventually all energy is lost as heat.
This is a well known phenomenon, it is called the LC ressonant ringdown, and it was waveforms like this I was hoping to see.
I will have to do some measurements with the module in the bike to try to find out what I am missing.

If you feel like diving a bit deeper into the function of the good old points breaker system, here is the absolute best article I have found that covers the subject:


https://ttypes.org/conventional-ignition-systems/

To be continued
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Re: That ignitor module
Reply #24 - 07/06/25 at 07:44:40
 
Reading through your experiments, I am missing the big picture.  As I left, I thought you had no working ignition module.

It sounds like:
1) You got another good ignitor module, and used it to produce IMG_20250616_183557_NR?

2) You built a circuit that is intended to replace BOTH pickup coil and ignition module and connected this to the ignition coil?  Or, is your circuit intended to replace only the input from the pickup coil, and connected to the Suzuki ignitor?
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Re: That ignitor module
Reply #25 - 07/07/25 at 01:36:20
 
Axman,

Picture IMG_20250616_183557_NR, shows the output of the pickup coil while cranking the engine without a spark plug installed. This image was made before I received a new used module.

The recent entries show how I tried to trigger this new module with waveforms generated by a signal generator, ampified to the same voltage level as that produced from the pickup coil.
As you will see, the module does not respond well to the signals produced, I don't quite understand why, but suspect that the fast risetime of this signal is the reason.
I am presently working on a way to faithfuly replicate the sinusoidal waveform from the pickup coil here in the electrinics lab, so that I can investigate the ignitors way of producing the spark.

Obviously, the ignitor is able to drive the bike with a sufficient spark, the bike starts and runs fine as it is, but the spark looks awfully weak to my eyes. Then again, the last time I fiddled with engines was in the 19 seventies, when point breaker systems were the rule of the day.

Cheers, Finn Hammer
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Re: That ignitor module
Reply #26 - 07/07/25 at 10:49:42
 
FinnHammer wrote on 07/07/25 at 01:36:20:
The recent entries show how I tried to trigger this new module with waveforms generated by a signal generator, ampified to the same voltage level as that produced from the pickup coil.

You know a lot more about electronics than I do, and I appreciate what you are trying to do.  It's easier to understand when all the particulars of the experiment are fully described, so nobody has to make assumptions.

The output voltage shown in IMG_20250616_183557, looked to me to be about 40V max?   That's quite a lot for a pickup coil, when I've seen numbers mentioned around testing pickup coil signals, they were just a few volts, but this was probably with the coils operating open circuit on the measuring meter.

One thing that I mentioned it early in the thread, was that it seems like the "noise" of the 3 phase alternator represents quite a regular pattern of pulses.  These would be clearer if the X and Y of the signal shown in IMG_20250616_183557 were amplified, but it does look like the voltage is bouncing consistently between something like 0 to 13 volts.  

If, Suzuki had chosen to use these low amplitude "noise" pulses for determining engine speed, and not just the once per spin signal from the dedicated reluctors, with 9 sets of coils in operation, it seems like those low amplitude pulses at ~333 rpm, would be coming out at 3000 Hz?  If Suzuki was using this method, and had decided that this number was the lowest rpm that the ignitor would produce spark at, that might account for your trigger circuit eliciting no response below 3000HZ.  Could the ignitor be counting your spark trigger pulses, then operating as fast as it is capable of producing sparks?

What was the behavior at 4000, 5000, and 6000 Hz?

Certainly modern rotors have many, many nodes to produce a much busier crank position signal than a single pulse per rpm.  The rotor pictured is from another single cylinder bike.  What we don't see, (on the back side in the picture), is a wide node, then a gap, but this rotor has something like 27 nodes.
https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/f3AAAOSw3h1ZQpM5/s-l1600.webp
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FinnHammer
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Re: That ignitor module
Reply #27 - Yesterday at 14:28:30
 
Axman, all

When taking measurements on a running bike, with sensitive equipment, some signals show up which are not really part of the signal path, but find their way into it by induction and by other means.The generator signal being one such thing, an artifact, not intended to be there, but nontheless looking real on the scope trace.

For a while now, I will pause the trying to simulate the behaviour of the module on the bench, because, as we surely all can agree, there is nothing that beats the real thing.
I therefore moved the scope out to the bike to take some realtime shots from the trigger coil line and the ignition coil primary, to see how they line up relative to each other, over a range of revolutions.

The yellow trace is the pickup coil with 20V between divisions, the cyan trace is the voltage across the ignition coil primary, also with 20V between divisions.

I took readings at 1200RPM, 2000RPM, 3000RPM,4000RPM and finally 5000RPM. The latter being the fastest I feel comfortable revving the bike without the road as a load.

These readings revealed a couple of interesting things one of them I had previously overlooked: The voltage out of the pickup coil, when loaded by the internal resistance of the module, starts at 12.8V @ 1200RPM, then gradually rises to something like 31.2V "5000RPM. This makes a lot of sense and will greatly facilitate replicating the waveform for later bench tests.

The other thing that came out of the test today, is the clear correlation between the +- voltage peaks and the ignition timing.
I have copied closeups of the timing sequences related to the various engine speeds, and as you can see, the ignition advances from alignment with the negative pulse @1200RPM untill it aligns with the positive pulse @4000RPM. Revving the engine higher than that does not produce further advancing of the ignition.

How the module manages to produce the advancing timing is anyones guess at this time.


For obvious reasons, I was unable to verify the possible cut out @>10000RPM, and I did not feel like cutting the black wire to investigate what effect it has.
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Re: That ignitor module
Reply #28 - Yesterday at 17:48:55
 
FinnHammer wrote on Yesterday at 14:28:30:
I moved the scope out to the bike to take some realtime shots from the trigger coil line and the ignition coil primary, to see how they line up relative to each other, over a range of revolutions.

The yellow trace is the pickup coil with 20V between divisions, the cyan trace is the voltage across the ignition coil primary, also with 20V between divisions.

The voltage out of the pickup coil, when loaded by the internal resistance of the module, starts at 12.8V @ 1200RPM, then gradually rises to something like 31.2V "5000RPM. This makes a lot of sense ...



Thanks for sharing the signal traces from your bike's ignition.   I think it's really cool.  Makes me want a better scope, even though what I really need is more knowledge, and time to play with my existing Hantek.

I'm trying to follow along, and learn as much as I can from your work, so I hope you don't mind my continued questions.

1)  Why does it "make sense" that ignitor primary voltage rises with RPM?  Is this because the greater speed of the rotor increases the rate of change of the magnetic flux in the pickup coil?
2) I noticed that your earliest traces, from the pickup coil (Reply #1, 14), showed the negative pulse first, followed by the positive.  Why are these reversed now?  Maybe you just hooked the leads on opposite terminals?
3)  The primary coil signal reaches about 84V max amplitude? (label "P")
4) What is the time scale for the yellow ( pickup coil) trace?  Using your method, at 3000 rpm I calculate 1.9 msec for 34 degrees of separation, but the image shows 3/5 of a division.
5) Is the cyan trace using the same time base?
6) On the image, why does the the cyan trace go negative (-14V?), almost two full divisions of time base before being triggered?
7)  I tried to label what I thought was the Beginning, End, and duration of the Spark event on the Primary signal trace.  Did I do this correctly?

I know that some digital oscilloscopes have the ability to store signal traces in memory for later visual review.  Could one also "play the signal back" (like a digital sampler would), such that one could use the scope as the source of a trouble shooting signal?   Or does would this require incorporation of a power amp of impossibly high specification?
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Re: That ignitor module
Reply #29 - Today at 06:00:30
 
Axman88 wrote on Yesterday at 17:48:55:

Thanks for sharing the signal traces from your bike's ignition.   I think it's really cool.  Makes me want a better scope, even though what I really need is more knowledge, and time to play with my existing Hantek.

I'm trying to follow along, and learn as much as I can from your work, so I hope you don't mind my continued questions.


You are more than welcome, I appreciate the conversation. I am not an expert myself so we can figure this out together, and your questions help me to focus on things I did not think about.
The RIGOL  DS1054Z of mine has many advanced features but it is really an entry level scope, and extremely good value for the money.
What Hantek scope do you have?

Axman88 wrote on Yesterday at 17:48:55:


1)  Why does it "make sense" that ignitor primary voltage rises with RPM?  Is this because the greater speed of the rotor increases the rate of change of the magnetic flux in the pickup coil?

I was thinking along the same line here...

Axman88 wrote on Yesterday at 17:48:55:


2) I noticed that your earliest traces, from the pickup coil (Reply #1, 14), showed the negative pulse first, followed by the positive.  Why are these reversed now?  Maybe you just hooked the leads on opposite terminals?

Exactly, I did not pay much attention to the polarity, since they are references towards each other, and not to ground.
Axman88 wrote on Yesterday at 17:48:55:


3)  The primary coil signal reaches about 84V max amplitude? (label "P")

Yes, and that is a very low value indicating that there is perhaps not a lot of energy put into the sparkcoil. I am still trying to figure out what to make of what the cyan trace tells me, I will talk about it in a later post.

Axman88 wrote on Yesterday at 17:48:55:


4) What is the time scale for the yellow ( pickup coil) trace?  Using your method, at 3000 rpm I calculate 1.9 msec for 34 degrees of separation, but the image shows 3/5 of a division.


Timescale for:
1200, 2000,3000 is 2mS (so you are close)
4000 is 1mS
5000 is 500µs

Axman88 wrote on Yesterday at 17:48:55:


5) Is the cyan trace using the same time base?


Yes, same time base for all traces on the same screen.

Axman88 wrote on Yesterday at 17:48:55:


6) On the image, why does the the cyan trace go negative (-14V?), almost two full divisions of time base before being triggered?


That is because the reference of the signals is the positive terminal, which is continously connected to positive. The other terminal is intermittendly connected to negative to initiate current flow through the coil (and that happens as you say ~2 divisions before the trigger) then abruptly disconnected to create the voltage spike which in turn induces the high voltage event in the secondary coil to make the spark. when the spark dies out, about one division later, both terminals are at 14V connected by the internal resistance of the primary coil.   And then the sequence starts over....


Axman88 wrote on Yesterday at 17:48:55:


7)  I tried to label what I thought was the Beginning, End, and duration of the Spark event on the Primary signal trace.  Did I do this correctly?


Yes.
Neg? is when the coil begins to be charged
B is the trigger point, so there the spark starts
P is the initial amplitude of the secondary during the spark
S and E: I am not so sure. I don't think the spark lasts that long.  I will show you here in the end an expanded view of what is going on with the primary coil.


Axman88 wrote on Yesterday at 17:48:55:

I know that some digital oscilloscopes have the ability to store signal traces in memory for later visual review.  Could one also "play the signal back" (like a digital sampler would), such that one could use the scope as the source of a trouble shooting signal?   Or does would this require incorporation of a power amp of impossibly high specification?


I have not heard of a scope that has this function, but perhaps it exists on the really expensive high end types. Letme know what Hantek you have, it probably can store signals too.

I still find usefull features in my equipment. For example. I could export the trigger coil waveform from the scope and save it to a USB stick as a CSV file, then load it into my signal generator and play it from there. Pretty cool.

Anyway, here is the 3000closeup, which shows the going on's of the primary ignition coil. I think it shows that the spark event is over in around 200µS or so. It ressonates at 23kHz and since the inductance of the primary is around 11mH, then it has around 4nF to ressonate with. That is not a lot.
However, 4.3 ohms primary resistance allows around 3 amps to pass, resulting in an energy stored of 50mJ. Injecting this energy into a 4nF capacitor should result in a voltage of  5000V  across it's terminals, so something is not right. Lots to ponder here.....

(an online LC ressonance calculator is your friend: https://www.omnicalculator.com/physics/resonant-frequency-lc
Did you read and understand the fabulous article about classical ignition systems? https://ttypes.org/conventional-ignition-systems/

This is what I think:
Proper ignition systems like point breaker and the later ones where the breaker point is replaced with a thyristor: They are great because they establish a proper LC ringdown, with a good size capacitor, which transfers proper power to the spark in a well controlled manner.

Capacitor Discharge Ignition: Same, only the position of the switching element is different. Still a well defined capacitor is discharged into an inductance in series, resulting in a ringdown.

Then we have this Savage Ignitor system..... It just seems flaky. Perhaps it is due to the age of my specimen. I miss to see a beautifull sinusoidal ringdown.

-And yes, I know, thousands of Savages and S40's run for decades with this system without a problem.

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