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Distributors
- working basics. |
15
September 2000 |
Terminology
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TDC |
Top Dead Centre |
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BTDC |
Before Top Dead Centre |
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Dizzy |
Distributor |
|
CR |
Compression ratio |
To maximise
power and economy potential from any engine, burning the compressed fuel/air
mixture at precisely the right point throughout the engines entire rpm range is
essential. This ‘point’ is generally somewhere before the piston reaches TDC on
its power stroke described in degrees - i.e. 10 degrees BTDC. This point isn’t
constant throughout the rpm range. Low rpm values are normally less than high
ones.
Ultimately
the dizzy provides this spark at exactly the right point to effect
this burn. Engine size, cam type, head mods/efficiency,
valve sizes, compression ratio, fuel used, inlet/exhaust manifolding
and carburation all influence just when this should
occur for optimum power. From this it can be seen that one dizzy from one
performance type engine may not be suitable for another of similar output, and
that a standard dizzy is unlikely to be right for a modified one.
All dizzies
contain the same system for controlling when the spark occurs at different rpm
- two weights and two springs. The weights are mounted on a plate fixed to the
dizzy spindle. As the dizzy spindle spins faster with rising engine rpm, the
weights slide outwards under centrifugal force. These then rotate the cam that
operates the points - making the spark occur earlier (advancing the timing).
The rate at which they are allowed to move is controlled by the springs that
are connected to the points cam at one end and
anchored to the fixed plate at the other. The springs are of different
tensions, one controlling low rpm advance the other high rpm advance. Total
advance is controlled by a stop on the points cam.
These three things altogether influence what is commonly called the
(centrifugal) advance curve. Altering the combinations and parameters tailors
each dizzy to their respective engines.
The fourth
parameter used to further control how the advance curve is applied is the
vacuum advance unit. At part throttle openings, the engine isn't inhaling a
full lungs-worth of fuel/air mixture, so is performing well below its dynamic
compression ratio value. In other words, there's less in there to squeeze prior
to ignition for the power stroke. To this end, higher ignition values can be
used to produce better power and economy without detonation becoming a problem.
As the dizzy is already tailored to supply the only set of values it can -
being mechanical - the vacuum advance unit literally pulls the advance curve
forward so it produces these required higher values. Once the throttle is
opened to give more acceleration/power the vacuum is lost, and the dizzy
returns to its original mechanical advance curve values.