Cam position sensing w/o a cam sensor
Shannen Durphey
shannen at grolen.com
Tue Nov 27 18:25:08 GMT 2001
Using crank position, opposite cylinders can initially be fired together. The
voltage required in the cylinder w/ compression is higher. Lesson left over
from waste spark, and similar methods might be applicable to that system. If
you're watching cylinder #1 for this higher voltage, you can tell whether the
coil is firing during a compression or exhaust stroke.
Shannen
Jim Blackwood wrote:
>
> But isn't that a little circular? Assuming the purpose of sensing #1 is
> to fire #1 wouldn't sensing the spark to start the process just cause
> more trouble?
>
> Jim
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-diy_efi at diy-efi.org [mailto:owner-diy_efi at diy-efi.org] On
> Behalf Of Jason Haines
> Sent: Monday, November 26, 2001 9:42 PM
> To: diy_efi at diy-efi.org
> Subject: Re: Cam position sensing w/o a cam sensor
>
> Some of the new ignition systems determine the cam position through
> ionization energy or similar voltage/spark plug related methods. The new
> L850 "world" 4 cylinder from GM (that is in the Cavalier, Sunfire, Vue
> (Saturn), Opel (can't remember the model), etc. ) uses this method. No
> cam sensor - uses the individual cylinder ignition system to determine
> cam position. I wonder how quickly it figures it out. I am not sure what
> manufacturer makes the PCM/ECM.
>
> Jason
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe from diy_efi, send "unsubscribe diy_efi" (without the quotes)
in the body of a message (not the subject) to majordomo at lists.diy-efi.org
More information about the Diy_efi
mailing list