MSD belt driven distributor question
a traditional distributor is not bad, it has it's place because of it's simplicity and ease of maintenance and tuning. But with high rpm anything mechanical that has to be accurate, isn't going to be accurate. Not like a magnetic pickup sensor off the crankshaft, this is the best thing for timing accuracy, and you can spin the motor any rpm you like. The ignition [computer] can work off the signal very accurately.
having 1 ignition coil (as in a distributor setup) has high rpm problems because there is less time for it to build spark. The higher the rpm, the less time for the coil to saturate and it produces a weaker spark, and the engine eventually sputters.
Having a distributorless ignition is the way to go because it opens the door for a coil-per-cylinder setup, basically because you now have a computer that controls things. This is having one coil per cylinder, opposed to 1 coil for all 8 cylinders. So by a coil for each cylinder, on an 8 cylinder the time the coil has to generate spark is improved by a factor of 8.
Consider the traditional 350 chevy running 5000 rpm no problem on a distributor with 1 coil for 8 cylinders. Now go to 1 coil for each cylinder, at 10000 rpm (twice the rpm) each coil still has a 4x length of time to build spark compared to 1 coil for all 8 cylinders at 5000 rpm.
Still on the stock crank target wheel, but there is some concern about signal dropout from the sensor about 9500. Switching to an equal tooth wheel on the damper fixes that though.
Who exactly told you it has problems?
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Thanks,Mike
The issue on the factory 24X wheel is the resolution of the target and sensor pair at high speed. The split wheel/mirror configuration and alternating tooth sizes (really the 5 degree tooth) is the issue. Things become a blur to the sensor as you go up in speed, nothing to do with the box doing the control.
The issue on the factory 24X wheel is the resolution of the target and sensor pair at high speed. The split wheel/mirror configuration and alternating tooth sizes (really the 5 degree tooth) is the issue. Things become a blur to the sensor as you go up in speed, nothing to do with the box doing the control.
Shouldn't the lower resolution be less of a blur at higher RPM? at 9,000 RPM the 24x reluctor should be ~3600hz signal instead of the ~8700hz signal for a higher resolution 58x reluctor. I know its not entirely related but where I work there's a large high speed (615ft/min) conveyor system that counts a pin every 5" for fault detection, we had to upgrade to a high speed coutner module to tell the PLC an integer instead of flagging an input every time a pin passed because it was just missing pins, and that's less than 25hz, not to meniton what we're using is the highest quality high speed counters available. I'm not sure if BS3 or any other aftermarket EFI system has high speed counter modules on them but I can almost gaurantee they do. I'm sure the difference between efi controllers being able to succesfully control CDI or individual coil ignitions at high RPM lies in these modules.
Stock PCM uses a dedicated ASIC for crank decode and routing to the coils, not sure on the BS3.
It's simply a "feature" of the stock target wheel and sensor combo. Nothing to do with the box getting the info.
It takes very little CPU HP to read a crank signal. A MAF input is orders of magnitude higher frequency and those are common place.





