The first one is a "Single Coil". Pretty straight forward. You are still using a distributor and firing a single coil. Note all of these are done at 3000rpm and a 3ms of dwell (how long the coil is charged). What we are going to be comparing is the Duty Cycle (DC) of each. With a single coil at only 3000rpm we are charging the coil 30% of the time. This is fine for a low performance stock application. In a performance application you will quickly cut into the coil charging time robbing out output because the coil can't fully charge
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COP |
Then we come to the pinnacle, Sequential Ignition. "Coil on Plug" (COP) or "Coil near Plug" (CNP). With Sequential ignition we are using the same amount of drivers as we have cylinders. Each output fires a individual cylinder in the firing order. In this case 1,4,3,2. This cuts the dwell of Wasted Spark in half again! Now we can keep our coils very cool and run at an even greater RPM or charge them long enough to ignite 30+psi of boost pressure. This is for the other 10% that need to have the best and want the most control. You will need a Cam Sync to allow your ECU to run in the correct firing order. This is the most complex to setup and tune.
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LS2 |
I hope this has helped you! Let me know if you have any questions. And if you are curious, my new ECU will drive all of these coil options.
-Mario
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