Ignition system
Hey!
I have been trying to build an ignition system with an ignition coil i buyed, But the problem is that i only get an small spark from it. And i have no clue why?
I attatched a picture that shows how i have been wiring it!
I use 12V as a power source and i have been trying with higher voltages but with no success
Do you guys know what im doing wrong?
And another question, how do you add prewievs on the post?
I have been trying to build an ignition system with an ignition coil i buyed, But the problem is that i only get an small spark from it. And i have no clue why?
I attatched a picture that shows how i have been wiring it!
I use 12V as a power source and i have been trying with higher voltages but with no success
Do you guys know what im doing wrong?
And another question, how do you add prewievs on the post?
Correct me if im wrong but, to me it looks like the camera circuit is charged up by the 12v battery, which when the circuit is armed, discharges the cap and that is sent to the ignition coil which ramps up the voltage to deliver the spark.
the capacitor is a circuit Single Use Camera
the diode is not connected to a transformer but on a car relay
Here is a link that may help you also:
http://www.spudfiles.com/forums/how-to- ... 23160.html
the diode is not connected to a transformer but on a car relay
Here is a link that may help you also:
http://www.spudfiles.com/forums/how-to- ... 23160.html
Happy to see you made use of that revised diagram I did for you.Petitlu wrote: I just finished with an ignition coil is working well, here's the diagram:
The diode across the coil is just a good design practice on inductive loads.
It will make the contacts of low current switches last longer.
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Your basic circuit is OK, you are just missing one thing. You need a cap across your switch. That's how an automotive ignition circuit is setup and the cap is very important. IIRC, you need about an 0.1 MFD cap rated to tens of volts? Technician will probably chime in with the correct cap rating.
The circuit will throw a spark every time the switch is opened. If you want a simple oscillator type circuit you can replace the switch with a relay wired as a "buzz coil" (Google it). That setup will give you something like several hundred sparks per second.
The photoflash board circuit will work as well but really is a lot more complex than needed. The 12V battery + switch + automotive ignition coil + cap has been used literally trillions of times to ignite fuel air/mixtures. The big advantage of the photoflash board is that it'll operate from a AA battery for a fairly large number of sparks. The simpler coil/switch/cap setup takes a much beefer 12V power supply.
The circuit will throw a spark every time the switch is opened. If you want a simple oscillator type circuit you can replace the switch with a relay wired as a "buzz coil" (Google it). That setup will give you something like several hundred sparks per second.
The photoflash board circuit will work as well but really is a lot more complex than needed. The 12V battery + switch + automotive ignition coil + cap has been used literally trillions of times to ignite fuel air/mixtures. The big advantage of the photoflash board is that it'll operate from a AA battery for a fairly large number of sparks. The simpler coil/switch/cap setup takes a much beefer 12V power supply.
The diode suppresses the inductive back emf which can be a higher voltage than the switches can handle. Think of a higher voltage arc.
See this explanation:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:FlybackExample.GIF
See this explanation:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:FlybackExample.GIF