Tuesday 24 May 2011

Ignition Colis and Ballast Resistors

 IGNITION COILS

 Single Ignition Coils



there are two different parts to test on an ignition coil:

Primary windings, to test these you have to set you multimeter to resistance on the 20ohms scale, put your prongs on the two primary terminals of the coil. this makes sure that the primary windings in the coil are not touching the secondary windings. the reading you should get is somewhere between 0.1 and 0.9ohms



as demonstrated in the image below:


image is from: www.farmallcub.com


To test the secondary windings, keep your multimeter set to check resistance and place one prong from the multimeter on a primary terminal of the coil and the other prong in the secondary part of the coil (middle). the reading you should be getting can range from 5 ohms to 10 ohms this also makes sure that the windings in the coil (primary and secondary) are not touching and there is not too much resistance in the windings:


as demonstrated below:



image is from www.farmallcub.com



Wasted Spark Ignition Coils


www.nzefi.com

The idea of a wasted spark ignition coil is to spark two spank plugs at once (one on the power stroke and another on its exhaust stroke). this was because if there is any unburnt fuels they will be re burnt on the exhaust stroke and creates better fuel economy.

there are two different types of tests you do on this coil, one is a test between the two secondary windings that will spark at the same time. (you would test this 3 times for the 3 different coils on the picture above)
you test these by setting you multimeter to resistance on 10 killer ohms, you then place your prongs of your multimeter on the two secondary parts of the coil that you are testing.
the reading you get should be around 8.5kohms, this is a good reading and shows that there will be good spark to the spark plugs.


www.evgen-autotronics.blogspot.com


 the other check you need to make is in the primary windings. these are the windings that make a magnetic field and charge up the secondary windings. to check these windings you put your multimeter on resistance. and place your prongs on pin outs on the coil, depending on manufacture specifications. the reading should generally vary depending on manufacture.





BALLAST RESISTORS



www.farmallcub.com


in the above picture is a ballast resistor, this goes in the circuit before the positive primary winding and lowers the voltage and amperage going to the coil so it doesnt over heat.
to test this ballast resistor you set your multimeter to resistance (20 ohms), you then place your prongs of the multimeter onto the prongs of the ballast resistor. you should then get a reading of around 1.5 ohms depending on the manufacture specifications. if your reading is below or close to the specifications it is able to be reused.
www.mohebghazi-electronicsystem.blogspot.com


Measuring current draw and voltage drop:

to measure the current draw you need to hook up a coil and ballast resistor in series with your multimeter and a 12 volt battery supply:



the current draw i got was 4 amps, anything around there means there is good current draw, this is the current that the coil is drawing to charge.
i then had to measure the resistance across the coil and ballast resistor as explained is the previous tasks.
coil resistance = 1.3ohms
ballast resistor resistance = 1.7ohms



once i had these resistances i was able to calculate the voltage drop across the coil and ballast resistor:

coil:
4amps x 1.3 resistance = 5.8 voltage drop


ballast resistor;
4amps x 1.7 resistance = 6.2 voltage drop

i then measured the the voltage drops myself with a multimeter:
coil:
4.7 voltage drop

ballast resistor:
6.83 voltage drop

the voltage drop across the coil was quite far out of specification because i left my voltage supply on for a while and it got quite hot and added more resistance in my coil.

Tuesday 3 May 2011

Injector testing

In this  test i was asked to gather four injectors.
the injectors that i had happened to only have two different types, although i had four injectors all together.



The injectors i used had special numbers on them:

injector 1 = 2040
injector 2 = 1970
injector 3 = 2040
injector 4 = 1970

I was asked to get the manufactures specifications for the resistances of these injectors, i did this by searching the serial number and brand of the injectors on "Google search"

These are the specifications i got:

injector 1 = 13.5 ohms
injector 2 = 13.8 ohms
injector 3 = 13.5 ohms
injector 4 = 13.8 ohms

Once i had the specifications for the injector resistances i then measured them myself to see if they were within specifications. i did this by setting my multimeter to the resistance mode and then placing my two prongs onto the two prongs of the injector, by doing this it will tell me the resistance between the windings on the injector.

these are my results:

injector 1 = 13.9 ohms
injector 2 = 14.0 ohms
injector 3 = 14.0 ohms
injector 4 = 13.9 ohms


I then checked if my injectors didnt have to much resistance in the windings, i do this by setting my multimeter to resistance mode and placed one of my prongs on one prong of the injector and my other prong on the other prongs of the injector,
the reading i should get should be around 14 ohms.



the next test i did was an earth leakage test, i did this by placing my prong on one of the injector prongs and the other prong on the body of the injector. if i get no reading there is no leakage to earth on those windings. you then change your prong to the other prong of the injector, if you also have no reading your wndings are in good condition and there is no leakage to earth.

i then wired up my injectors to see if they were working,
to do this i had a power supply of 5 volts and placed the negative on one of the prongs of the injector and the positive on the other prong of the injector, if they were working i would here a clicking noise, this means that the magnetic field was pulling the pin back and the spring was closing the pin when the magnetic field collapsed.

injector bench test:

for this test i placed my injectors into the test bench cleaner.




 http://www.12psdw.com/product/CNC-602A-Injector-Cleaner-&-Tester.html





the machine holds the injector open for a certain amount of time (in my case 15 seconds). a special cleaner then gets pumped threw the injectors and into the clear tube. the tube has marks on it which helps you see how full your tube gets.
all injectors should be the same amount because they all have the same specifications. if the injectors are not the same full amount, their must something wrong with the injector because it is not performing properly. generally the injector can get dirt caught in it and the flow gets restricted.
the injectors i tested were all the the same flow rate. once your injectors have closed after 15 seconds, you times that by four to get your per minute flow rate.

my injector flow rate was 192cc per minute flow rate.

i also had to check the flow pattern and all of my injector a had a good even cone shaped spray figure.
there was also no leakage threw my injectors when they were closed and under pressure.

all of my injectors were working fine and could be used in a engine.