by Tony » Sat Apr 01, 2006 6:27 pm
Bruce, these ignition lead pickups operate on the current transformer principle, so the output is going to be a very fast current spike when the plug fires. The output from the pickup coil ABSOLUTELY MUST have a fairly low value resistor connected directly across the output winding. The commercial pickups will most likely already have this fitted inside.
The output voltage will be essentially zero, with a very rapid and narrow pulse first in one direction, then the other, returning to zero fairly quickly soon after the plug has fired. By itself this is going to be a fairly unfriendly waveform to work with, and other equipment may not work too well off it directly.
But, the output waveform will look very much like that which comes out of the pickup coil used in an electronic variable reluctance distributor.
I have not actually tried this, but perhaps the simplest "off the shelf" signal conditioning system might be an ignition module or igniter salvaged from an electronic distributor. It would be well worth a try.
These ignition modules are used to seeing input signals that look very much like the signal that should come out of an inductive ignition pickup. The igniter will also stretch and amplify the very narrow pulse, to generate the necessary stretched "dwell" angle.
Just place a pullup resistor (say 100 ohms) to twelve volts from the output terminal if the igniter module, (where the ignition coil would normally go). That should then give you a nice clean 0-12v square wave output that can then be fed into some sort of tachometer circuit to indicate Rpm.
These ignition modules are good because the input signal can vary from just a few hundred millivolts at idle to tens of volts at redline, and swing in both directions. The module should work perfectly with some fairly nasty looking waveforms.
I suggest you beg, borrow, or steal an oscilloscope to get this working initially.
Also known as the infamous "Warpspeed" on some other Forums.