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Posted (edited)

Ventures use a TCI (transistor control ignition) where you have 12V power going to the primary side of ignition coil, and a ground going back to the igniter (ignition black box). You have current flowing back to the igniter, when the igniter needs to fire the spark plug, it opens the ground connection, collapsing the primary field, this causes the secondary (hi voltage windings) to fire the spark plug.

On a CDI (capacitator discharge ignition) the coils do not ground back to the black box....the black box sends a voltage pulse to a coil to fire the plug, and the coil boosts the voltage. Usually a CDI coil has only 1 primary wire, while a TCI has 2 wires on the primary.

The CDI black box can send up to 250+V to the coil...so be careful when working around a system with CDI.

Edited by Neil86
Posted
Ventures use a TCI (transistor control ignition) where you have 12V power going to the primary side of ignition coil, and a ground going back to the igniter (ignition black box). You have current flowing back to the igniter, when the igniter needs to fire the spark plug, it opens the ground connection, collapsing the primary field, this causes the secondary (hi voltage windings) to fire the spark plug.

On a CDI (capacitator discharge ignition) the coils do not ground back to the black box....the black box sends a voltage pulse to a coil to fire the plug, and the coil boosts the voltage. Usually a CDI coil has only 1 primary wire, while a TCI has 2 wires on the primary.

The CDI black box can send up to 250+V to the coil...so be careful when working around a system with CDI.

 

Thanks - great explanation.

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