duncan
25-02-2012, 09:54 PM
Following from Jonathan comment on the potential to use the later OBD11 [3 pin] coil packs on earlier OBD1 [2 pin] cars.
i'm guessing the 3 wire OBDII coils have a pair of coil supply wires and a sense wire whereas the OBD1 have just the pair of coil supply wires... just thinking if the mountings are the same that a set of 6 adapter wires can't be too difficult to make....
I wondered the same; simply snip off the 3rd pin and have some sort of piggy back connector between them, HOWEVER, the polarity of the spark seems different. See the two attached pdf's.
Assuming the low tension side A and B have the same polarity [effectively the CB and SW terminals in old money], the spark will jump in a different direction as the diodes have opposite polarities.
My questions are, am I correct, does this matter and will it it work.
In the days of my youth I ran a Citroen 2CV; the 2CV used a twin ended coil with all [both of the 2] cylinders firing at the same time, the respective sparks jumped in different directions. The spark plugs eroded at different rates.
i'm guessing the 3 wire OBDII coils have a pair of coil supply wires and a sense wire whereas the OBD1 have just the pair of coil supply wires... just thinking if the mountings are the same that a set of 6 adapter wires can't be too difficult to make....
I wondered the same; simply snip off the 3rd pin and have some sort of piggy back connector between them, HOWEVER, the polarity of the spark seems different. See the two attached pdf's.
Assuming the low tension side A and B have the same polarity [effectively the CB and SW terminals in old money], the spark will jump in a different direction as the diodes have opposite polarities.
My questions are, am I correct, does this matter and will it it work.
In the days of my youth I ran a Citroen 2CV; the 2CV used a twin ended coil with all [both of the 2] cylinders firing at the same time, the respective sparks jumped in different directions. The spark plugs eroded at different rates.