Just thinking about Delphi's solution to getting an ion current without a dedicated power supply...
I plan to implement the circuit from Delphi's coil design for one of my coils as a test.
I'm not convinced that 80v is sufficient to make a detectable ion current, so I plan to use 200v zeners. (39p each from Farnell)
I am wondering what the best value of capacitor is?
Assuming the spark is at TDC:
At low engine speed (1000RPM) we need there to be enough charge to power the ion circuit for just under 6ms, and the circuit will have 55ms recovery time (allow for wasted spark)
Conversely at high engine speed (7000RPM) we need charge for 0.85ms and have a recovery time of 7.7ms
So taking the 2 extreme requirements, we have 6ms use time and 7.7ms recovery time. Not exactly ideal, but I suspect it doesn't matter too much about recovery time.
Charging time is not an issue really - there is the energy there is. The only snag is that if the spark is a long way advanced then the ion circuit needs to be powered for more crank degrees, so more time.
To some extent, the value for C1 depends on the resistance and inductance of the secondary coil, so there will be tinkering required to get it right... I'm planning to start with 2 microFarads and see what happens.
As rough "guesses", R1 should be 2k and R4 should be 38k to give us a reasonable chance of good scope-measurable signals. This is based on ion currents being of the order of 1mA and the zeners being 200v.
Does anyone have any thoughts before I attempt to destroy my coils?
Thanks.