We'd love to see you, Tess, and the boys at Harlan! Thinking of getting a Land between the lakes run together around september, you're more than welcome to come.
Runs great and smooth. I just cut the tab off for the timing indicator, took off the pulley and all is good. I think I might be replacing the thermostat, wire in the electric fan with a toggle switch and all should be good for now.
It's not really an open vs close type thing - it's either a high or a low logic signal, on OBD rigs at least. The answer is even muddier on RENIX. The sensor is a Hall effect element with a magnet attached to it so that it can detect differences in the magnetic permeability of the space in front of its nose, which is modulated by the gaps in the steel reluctor ring.
Each pulse should be as long as a notch in the ring. I'm just not sure if they are low voltage (0-0.8v or so) pulses on a high voltage "background" signal (3-5v or so) or vice versa. Let me see if I can find the oscilloscope reading someone posted a while back...
EDIT: each notch in the wheel will make a ~5 volt pulse.
Here is a scope picture of a crank posistion sensor signal on a 01 XJ running at idle speed, one revolution of the motor...signal amplitude is approx 4.8v... you can see the pulse for each notch in the flywheel.
Hey! Glad to hear things are peachy in Alabama...oh wait, that's Georgia. Anyway, tell yours that my crew says hello. I still have your number and will use it.
Helpful lil tidbit I learned in school was everytime a coil collapses a voltage spike is produced.
Had a pretty good weekend. Hauled some cans to scrap saturday morning and went to Indy for the Brad Paisley concert. Got home at like 2AM this morning. Slept til 8 and spent the better part of the day loafing around and fishing. Didnt catch much but it was good to have a relaxing weekend with no working on something.
Helpful lil tidbit I learned in school was everytime a coil collapses a voltage spike is produced.
Had a pretty good weekend. Hauled some cans to scrap saturday morning and went to Indy for the Brad Paisley concert. Got home at like 2AM this morning. Slept til 8 and spent the better part of the day loafing around and fishing. Didnt catch much but it was good to have a relaxing weekend with no working on something.
t is time, L is inductance, di/dt is the first derivative of the current waveform over time. Basically, voltage at any given second is equal to the inductance in henries multiplied by the instantaneous slope of the current in amps over the time in seconds.