Well, I don't want to build up a hand cranked magneto with all this magnets, windings, ..., this is wasting a lot of money because I have to buy that parts.
My idea is applying either a rectified AC (so only positive half-waves, the negative ones are changed in their polarity), or by a pulsed DC voltage (simplified version). A little cam and a metal pointer will be mounted to a rotating shaft (driven by a little DC motor), the pointer is rotating inside a 90 degree scale made of metal and being connected to the high voltage output of the coil.
Principle (I am brainstorming)
The cam will press a micro switch and simulate the timer. At same time, the pointer is moving. Whenever a spark occurs, I will see it, so it works similar to the K.R. in this point, but it works only with one buzz-coil at a time.
When applying DC voltage, I see what happens in "battery mode", the coil permanently fires when timer is closed. When applying either pulsed DC or rectified AC, I will have four supplies per 1/4 revolution.
What I could not find out yet:
- Timing of timer.
How many degrees of crankshaft rotation is the buzz-coil connected to ground by the timer? It would save me a lot of trials if one here knows, otherwise I will have to measure the angle of very slowly turned crank from start to end of hearing a coil buzzing. (My tester will simulate 1 cylinder, so everything is related to 1/4 turn of engine crankshaft.) - How many AC Half Waves does the magneto produce on 1/4 turn of crankshaft?
Should be 4 or 8. Four magnets on 90 degrees if I am right. But I am not sure about number of half waves produced. I don't have an oscilloscope in my garage to measure that, and garage is far away from my lab. So it will help if somebody already figured that out. From theory, magnets are mounted N-S S-N N-S .... S-N so I have 16 poles on one revolution (or 4 poles in 1/4 revolution). But how many half waves do I have? - I also would like to know how many rpm the engine does when it is idling and running on travel speed (approx 30 mph)