New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
Wasted spark on Guzzis is not advisable, ask Pete Roper about it. I think the problem bike had a Lucas Rita ignition, backfired through carb, lost entire bike in ensuing fire.Brian
I also have an 85 leMans that I put a dyna III ignition in, and am very happy with it. I also have one in my Cal II, and it has been great. I would rather carry a spare dyna black box and pickup sensor in my tank bag, if leaving on a long trip "just in case" than to dick around with the wretched dual point distributor on those bikes, and trying to get both cylinders properly timed.Rick.
I think Cliff in AU makes such a thing. Can't be sure but here's info on contact http://www.cajinnovations.com/MyECU/
Back in the day loop riders would have the starter cranking & working the throttle like crazy to get them fired up, which is why I opted for the booster. ronkom
I would rather carry a spare dyna black box and pickup sensor in my tank bag, if leaving on a long trip "just in case" than to dick around with the wretched dual point distributor on those bikes, and trying to get both cylinders properly timed.
This always puzzled me. My '69 Ambo has always fired up without any drama, hot or cold. Still running stock ignition other than a Bosch Blue Coil. I would rather "dick around" with the points than have my Guzzi turn into a 475 cc single with air compressor attached. Been there, done that after the Dyna partially failed on my Le Mans 1000. Fifty miles on one cylinder was no fun... When I "refurbished" my Convert back in April of '17 I gapped the points, set the timing (no modification of the points plates necessary) and greased the cam of the distributor with a little Bosch Distributor Grease. Checked the point gap and timing just before I went to WNY this year (10k miles later) and it was still exactly where I set it. So, if I only have to fiddle with the point gap and timing once every few years, I see no need for an e.i. system.
Isn't the function of the condenser in a points system for this (accumulate charge, dump it when needed) - would the amplifier come before the condenser, there to make the accumulated charge higher? I'm learning, so I may have dumb questions until in sinks-in..
That C5 "Alive coil" looks interesting ! I dont really have an issue with the points on the Eldorado, the distributor is easy to get to, and service when needed.Its the dual point distributor on the tonti bikes that are more of a PITA for me to deal with for me.Rick.
I think you might be right about the C5 "Alive Coil", Joe. By the way, I just read through your complete thread on the Velleman Transistor Amp. A year's gap in the thread left out how you eventually configured the system?
So - Charlie and Yogi - you're saying the points don't change in 10K??? If that's normal, I don't see an urgent reason to modify anything right now.
Sort of, some guys maintain its there to prevent the points sparking but I believe its there to resonate with the coil. As the field in the coil collapses it generates a high Voltage spike that charges up the condenser which then discharges back into the coil, it sort of rings back and forth creating a fatter spark (actually many sparks one after another).Look at the diagram Sign216 posted, it has the condenser as well C1.I think the coils that don't require a condenser must have something different about the magnetic circuit that eliminates the need.
FWIW, my points need adjustment every 5-7k, maybe i'm using the wrong grease??!! I replaced the condensers 12K ago when I re-shimmed the distributor but still run the original coils. I put the coils on a relay vs. factory kill switch set-up and have no problems nor voltage drop to coils.