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Author Topic: A7 Magneto problem?  (Read 2378 times)
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manosound
Outside Chicago, IL
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« Reply #20 on: 15.02. 2008 12:50 »

Andy,

With your explanation, the "mark above" from your previous post makes perfect sense. Thnaks for clearing that up for me. Does the probe in your device get locked in place or does it move with the movement of the piston? If it locks, I am still a little curious about the "feel" of the piston coming in contact, but, I think that is something one must learn for one's self. I will be able to time my rebuild with the head off, so the whole question might not matter to me, for now.

Richard
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BSA500
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« Reply #21 on: 15.02. 2008 13:20 »

I found a picture of one on ebay and it does not lock but move with the piston.....

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fido
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« Reply #22 on: 15.02. 2008 16:42 »

I think if you use the device shown you should calculate for the plug hole angle. I use a pencil poked down the plug hole and try to keep it as near vertical as possible to reduce the angular error.
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manosound
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« Reply #23 on: 15.02. 2008 17:06 »

I may have already tortured this, but I'll stick my neck out anyway. Suppose you have concave or domed pistons, then, the point at which you make contact with the top of the piston at TDC may be at a very different angle than where you make contact BTDC. This could dramatically affect the BTDC measurement. This said, I must acknowlege that it's working for Andy. I wonder if his pistons are flat-tops?

Richard

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BSA500
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« Reply #24 on: 15.02. 2008 17:22 »

They are 8.5:1 comp pistons with a flat top,luckily the rod rests on these tops and not the slope around the edges.It shouldn't work if you think about it but it does so I don't think about it!!
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manosound
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« Reply #25 on: 15.02. 2008 17:30 »

I am now desparate to not think about it, but I know that as soon as my head is back form the shop I'm going to measure the plug angle and spew out a formula for compenstation, revealing an engineering obsession I could or should sometimes do without.

Richard
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groily
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« Reply #26 on: 15.02. 2008 18:46 »

Well, basic SOHCAHTOA trigonometry will enable anyone to calculate the extra length needed on a slanty rod to get the miraculous 3/8ths vertical, provided we know the angle at which the plug enters the head. Compensating for this issue is one reason I like the home-made fixed-length tool, which can be best made when engine is on bench if one can be bothered to put gasket and head on, torque it down, make tool with tip that just touches piston - domed or otherwise - when piston's in the right spot as set with the head off and measured accurately. Having said which I haven't made a precision one for an A10 yet, preferring a rod threaded down a dead plug.
Re the talk of getting adjustment on the cb end of the mag to enable fine tuning after locking the pinion, there are a few words in a few places, maybe even here, I can't remember. Anyway, it's perfectly possible to achieve minor adjustment of the cam ring in its housing, by removing the small locking screw that locates it (careful, it has a wee plug over the top of the screw head in the hole in the housing and it's hard to get out), and replacing with a larger thingy with an eccentric head which will push the notch in the cam ring a bit this way or that. A friend has done just this by drilling and tapping the hole to a larger size, and has 5 (crankshaft) degrees either way, which should be enough if one hasn't made a total ******** of setting the thing. The mag can stand that sort of variation without losing spark intensity as a result having the points open too far off optimal position of the armature. He runs a V twin, which with a mag is a sensitive beast and the palaver may have been worth it for him. For a BSA twin, with pretty long stroke and not exactly Formula 1 state of tune, I reckon it's great fun but not really worth all the hassle! Groily
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Bill
manosound
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« Reply #27 on: 15.02. 2008 21:23 »

I can't believe I was able to Google "SohCahToa" and find what it means. It's been a long time since my trigonometry class, but I think I would have remembered that word if the teacher had used it as a memory cue. For example, I still honor the memory of ROY G. BIV, or GUMP (pilot for: gas, undercarriage, mixture, prop).

Richard
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groily
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« Reply #28 on: 15.02. 2008 22:51 »

I'm amazed you could find it too, Richard. Sounds more like an oriental volcano. It's just one of those dumb things I've remembered since for ever. Never even thought about it until I got an old lathe and had to start thinking about turning tapers. Then suddenly, all that school stuff started to seem relevant and I wished I'd listened. So help me if I ever want to work out the area or volume under a curve, cos that I know I can't do! And ROY B. GIV? Bill
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Bill
manosound
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« Reply #29 on: 16.02. 2008 00:09 »

Colors in the visble spectrum and in a simple rainbow from longest wavelength to shortest: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet.
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a10gf
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« Reply #30 on: 16.02. 2008 12:55 »

^^ maybe my magneto lacks some orange and blue  smile ??
-----

bsa-bill wrote about adjusting the magneto realtive to case. Just some quick thoughts:

With a manual advance camring one can set the ignition time at any position, so I'd believe fitting a manual advance camhousing on any mag would give possibilities for fine adjustments without having to disassemble anything. Timing can then be done by replacing the cable with some adjusting bolt\thumbwheel. One would need a way of reading some accurate TDC \ timing marks, maybe finding a way to mark the points plate position relative to the outer edge of the camplate housing...? (Or, as I always did with old cars... adjust till pinking, then back of a little :O)
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A10 GF '53, Triumph 900 Legend, Yamaha XT500
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groily
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« Reply #31 on: 16.02. 2008 18:38 »

Of course - obvious when someone tells you the answer! What is '7 C in the VS?' - typical pub quiz type question. Thanks Richard.
Re using manual cam ring and housing to enable tuning from the 'other' end, it's OK up to a point, pardon the pun, but one of the reasons makers went to ATD was to make it so that the sparks always occurred at the points of max flux of the armature .  . a manual cam ring messes with that. The spark weakens quite considerably the further you get away from the optimum. The effect is easily testable with a mag on the bench and a cam ring that is allowed to rotate by removing the peg; while a decent mag correctly synchronised will give you a spark that will jump 1/4 inch or more when you turn the thing by hand, as you alter the relationship between armature position and when the points open, you'll see the spark gets weaker the further out of position you go. So while a (very) few degrees is probably fine, or at least not harmful, it's definitely another of those things you can have too much of. With a manual ign system, the makers ensured mags were best synchronised at max advance, as that's where the cam ring is most of the time. Hard too believe that many early engines used the advance/retard as the sole and very inefficient means of engine speed control . . . so there has been some progress! Groily
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Bill
a10gf
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« Reply #32 on: 17.02. 2008 14:32 »

You are entirely right about the magneto's ' max spark' position. As I get it, the automatic advance ensures the spark always occurs at the magneto's ideal position, a manual advance moves the points opening away from the mag's max flux when retarding the ignition. With the adjusting of camring I was only thinking about the finishing fine tuning and maintenance of correct TDC advance, without having the hassle of removing timing cover and moving mag pinion\advance unit, the latter always (to me at least) seeming to involve a dash of luck to get it right when tightening up.

BTW, I have the manual advance, and end up at max retard for idling and max advance for driving, very seldom feeling any use for any intermediate positions.
e
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A10 GF '53, Triumph 900 Legend, Yamaha XT500
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groily
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« Reply #33 on: 17.02. 2008 17:57 »

I reckon that's exactly and precisely it, fine tuning only, but I'm only a hobbyist!
Reason why I got interested in this was when a friend who knows far more than me broke down here in France with his Vincent Rapide (lucky man - to have a Rapide, I mean, not to break down far from home!) I got the job of trying to figure out what was wrong with it and pull the offending bits apart so he could order up and then come back when he had everything necessary. It was the mag, which had had its insulation melt internally and lock it solid.
He and I played endlessly with a rewound armature observing all these anorak things regarding points of max flux and effect of moving the cb in relation thereto. His bike has an ATD same as a latera BSA's; a Lucas KVF armature is exactly the same as a K2F in every way, what's different is the slip ring . . . and because it's a 50 degree V twin, one spark has to be delivered 25 mag armature degrees off optimal. That spark is noticeably weaker in bench testing, and explains why Vincent went to coil ignition quite early, although they didn't have the reliability of alternators to help them, just the dynamo from the good Mr Miller.
We wanted to see if things would be better with 2 sparks 12.5 degrees wrong, but that was hopeless because you can hardly get any decent spark much BEFORE point of max flux, which is what we were asking it to do on one cylinder, to allow the other to fire only 12.5 degrees AFTER. For reasons to do with Fizzix and things I don't understand, an armature is so synchronised at the factory that it delivers its spark about 3 degrees AFTER point of max flux - this lectrickery bends, it seems. While it will still deliver sparks as late as 25 degrees after, it is a poor creature at anything much before the optimal point.
Hence my diatribe about it only being feasible to play within strict limits if one wants to have a movable cam ring! Looking at that earlier post, I omitted to say that if one DID make an eccentric to engage the cam ring notch and give a bit of adjustment (which we did on this Vincent and it works brilliantly to allow minor post-setting correction), it's necessary to drill and tap the opposite side of the mag end housing, where there is a convenient spot, and put a grub screw in there. If not, the ring could start to wiggle out towards the points cover for the lack of anything to stop it.

Now, back to more mundane things in the barn, like the brakes on the wife's car . . . who said leave them be and hope for an insurance payout? Groily
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Bill
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« Reply #34 on: 18.02. 2008 13:53 »

Right have now retimed the engine no pinking hurray.But first start this morning and again the left cylinder playing up %*@@****""!!!!.Wriggled the plug cap about and it starting running fine-ish again,so get to work 'borrowed' a crimp connector ring thing and wire that on,now it seems to be fine.So to recap broke carbon brush and at the same time engine mucks about so strip mag to remove brush-check,still mucks about,find plug misbehaving replace,still mucks about,find plug cap mucking about replace with crimp ring seems fine.Will let you know if dodgy spy sat in space lands on me because with my luck who can say confused
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groily
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« Reply #35 on: 18.02. 2008 19:28 »

And don't go under a ladder unless it's in a stocking on a leg! Groily
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Bill
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« Reply #36 on: 18.02. 2008 21:05 »

Bike performed a treat on the way home tonight smile.I might even replace the other plug cap with a crimp connection and find a rubber boot to fit over it to make it waterproof.
Andy
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BSA500
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« Reply #37 on: 26.02. 2008 17:39 »

Right have now fitted the other crimp ring onto the timing side plug lead and further improvement, starts a treat and runs really well.Well pleased and rode the bike in the rain today and no damp issues.While I am on a roll I might even get given an alloy tank free of charge and a set of spitfire scrambler pipes and two reverse cones,then again I might not!!
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