erj-145mech
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 13, 2002
- Posts
- 1,071
As far as the mag timing goes, the mags are not timed to the impluse couplings, they are timed to the point opening. You'll get an impulse click per prop blade rotation on a four banger. Some aircraft engines have two impulse couplings per engine, mine for example does (TCM IO-360) but most Lycomings don't.
When I was working on the Rockwell Commanders, there was a service bulletin out to remove a bus bar from the back of the mag switch that grounds the right mag when you go to the start postion. What this bar did was to ground the right mag during the start (key to the start postition), so with the bar removed, you were getting two start sparks, one just after top dead center and the other at the normal crank position.
The impulse coupling not only retards the spark, but it also speeds up the rotating magnet in the mag to build a higher voltage. The magneto makes its own electricity, but it needs about 300 rpm to do so. The engine may not make that while starting, so the impluse makes up for the low speed.
When I was working on the Rockwell Commanders, there was a service bulletin out to remove a bus bar from the back of the mag switch that grounds the right mag when you go to the start postion. What this bar did was to ground the right mag during the start (key to the start postition), so with the bar removed, you were getting two start sparks, one just after top dead center and the other at the normal crank position.
The impulse coupling not only retards the spark, but it also speeds up the rotating magnet in the mag to build a higher voltage. The magneto makes its own electricity, but it needs about 300 rpm to do so. The engine may not make that while starting, so the impluse makes up for the low speed.