Hi Jason
That's a great idea of adding more coils but it has a couple of snags. One is the manufacturing tolerances of the housing itself. The coil has to be positioned very close to the rotor. Thousandths of an inch make a big difference in the voltage output. There would have to be a method of aligning the pickups after the cover is installed.
Another is that the legs of the stock coil is the pickup. The two poles induce magnetic flux in the legs. When one pole is at 12 o'clock the opposite pole is at 6 o'clock. The two legs are 180° apart; so are the poles of the magnet(s).
One magnet has north facing out; the other has south facing out. They cross the gaps of the pickup at noon and 6 o'clock. The pickup doesn't know/care that there is two magnets.
I don't either. If this were one of the diametrically magnetized rotors then it would be only one magnet. Until someone does the iron filings trick I don't know/care either.
Wow. When verifying two poles 180° out I noticed that the rotor isn't even round! At least on the engine I have here. And the coil isn't aligned with the rotor in the middle. I.E. the gaps are different. The top gap is at least twice as wide as the bottom!
I'm sure I would have seen this on the scope but I'm glad I noticed it now.
On every small engine I've worked on, there are only two screw/bolts holding the coil. That's to allow alignment of the coil (with a business card). They didn't have a two-legged pickup, though. With four screws holding the coil (unless the holes through the laminations are a good bit bigger than the screws) there is no coil alignment.
I'll let you know after I remove the screws at 1 o'clock and 5 o'clock if it makes a difference. Also looks like I might be able to "nudge" the pickups a little closed together to decrease the gaps.
I just loosened and aligned the coil; the holes are big enough to slide it around a bit. You will need two business cards if you do that. I still think I can close the gap a few thousandths by squeezing the legs together in a vise.
Ted
That's a great idea of adding more coils but it has a couple of snags. One is the manufacturing tolerances of the housing itself. The coil has to be positioned very close to the rotor. Thousandths of an inch make a big difference in the voltage output. There would have to be a method of aligning the pickups after the cover is installed.
Another is that the legs of the stock coil is the pickup. The two poles induce magnetic flux in the legs. When one pole is at 12 o'clock the opposite pole is at 6 o'clock. The two legs are 180° apart; so are the poles of the magnet(s).
One magnet has north facing out; the other has south facing out. They cross the gaps of the pickup at noon and 6 o'clock. The pickup doesn't know/care that there is two magnets.
I don't either. If this were one of the diametrically magnetized rotors then it would be only one magnet. Until someone does the iron filings trick I don't know/care either.
Wow. When verifying two poles 180° out I noticed that the rotor isn't even round! At least on the engine I have here. And the coil isn't aligned with the rotor in the middle. I.E. the gaps are different. The top gap is at least twice as wide as the bottom!
I'm sure I would have seen this on the scope but I'm glad I noticed it now.
On every small engine I've worked on, there are only two screw/bolts holding the coil. That's to allow alignment of the coil (with a business card). They didn't have a two-legged pickup, though. With four screws holding the coil (unless the holes through the laminations are a good bit bigger than the screws) there is no coil alignment.
I'll let you know after I remove the screws at 1 o'clock and 5 o'clock if it makes a difference. Also looks like I might be able to "nudge" the pickups a little closed together to decrease the gaps.
I just loosened and aligned the coil; the holes are big enough to slide it around a bit. You will need two business cards if you do that. I still think I can close the gap a few thousandths by squeezing the legs together in a vise.
Ted