special x do a search on google for ignition and rpm effect on 2 stroke flame front combustion or something similar, you might learn some thing mate
Which ignition retard
Adam is correct and special x is showing how little he understands two stoke engines.
special x do a search on google for ignition and rpm effect on 2 stroke flame front combustion or something similar, you might learn some thing mate
special x do a search on google for ignition and rpm effect on 2 stroke flame front combustion or something similar, you might learn some thing mate
Yep.
To special x, I think you are confusing 4 stroke ignition with 2 stroke.
A two stroke ignition system that advances with revs would be a recipe for disaster! However modern four stroke ignitions do advance with revs.
Even if you did set it safe....say 10 degrees advancing to say 16 or 17 degrees you would get less performance low down than a static set at 16 or 17 so there would be no gains at all.
To special x, I think you are confusing 4 stroke ignition with 2 stroke.
A two stroke ignition system that advances with revs would be a recipe for disaster! However modern four stroke ignitions do advance with revs.
Even if you did set it safe....say 10 degrees advancing to say 16 or 17 degrees you would get less performance low down than a static set at 16 or 17 so there would be no gains at all.
- Special X
- registered user
- Posts: 407
- Joined: Wed Jan 07, 2009 9:38 am
- Main scooter: Lambretta 125 special 230cc
- Location: Wakefield
- Contact:
So . . . . . . petrol burns at a uniform speed in a four stroke, but in a 2 stroke the petroil mixture senses that the revs are higher, and burns faster and faster as the engine speed rises.
Ok I'm sorry I was wrong, and I bow to your superior understanding of special physics.
Ok I'm sorry I was wrong, and I bow to your superior understanding of special physics.
- jason frost
- Dealer
- Posts: 485
- Joined: Wed Jan 07, 2009 11:45 am
- Contact:
- jason frost
- Dealer
- Posts: 485
- Joined: Wed Jan 07, 2009 11:45 am
- Contact:
Its about heat, as revs rise power and heat rise, by moving the timing closer to tdc you move the heat into the exhaust and not the cylinder head/ piston and you don't melt the piston.
- drunkmunkey6969
- Moderator
- Posts: 2838
- Joined: Sun Jan 04, 2009 1:42 pm
- Main scooter: '69 Lambretta GP
- Location: North Yorkshire
- Contact:
Horseshit.Special X wrote:You're absolutely right that variable ignition timing is better than static Adam, but it needs to advance as the revs rise, Rearding as the revs rise is a way of stopping an engine with too high compression, poor head design, wrong squish, etc grenading. A correctly set up motor with the ignition advancing as the revs rise would be the way forward.
Trouble is fashion now dictates that we all need to fit auto retard kits.
See our YouTube scooter channel for Tech-help: https://www.youtube.com/c/TheScooterFactory/videos
drunkmunkey6969 wrote:
Horseshit.
PS maybe the perp should fit one of those 'retard' kits back to front and appraise it for us Luddites?
Tell you what....get a ignition on your scoot that can be mapped. Tell the tuner you want 10 degrees to start off advancing to 17 or 18 degrees..... they mask ask whats the point??? but insist and see how s**t it runs at low revs compared to static at 17 degrees.Special X wrote:So . . . . . . petrol burns at a uniform speed in a four stroke, but in a 2 stroke the petroil mixture senses that the revs are higher, and burns faster and faster as the engine speed rises.
Ok I'm sorry I was wrong, and I bow to your superior understanding of special physics.
Then get it remapped to go from 16 degrees to advance to 23 or 24 degrees at top revs and watch your piston melt!
Go for it, I dare you
Bang on. If you retard your timing your egt goes up as more heat goes into the pipe and if you advance, egt goes down as more heat is held in the head.jason frost wrote:Its about heat, as revs rise power and heat rise, by moving the timing closer to tdc you move the heat into the exhaust and not the cylinder head/ piston and you don't melt the piston.
SIP in Germany, has a nice CDI, too
a blue and yellow one, from HHP
looks very good in quality, anybody knows more about it?
a blue and yellow one, from HHP
looks very good in quality, anybody knows more about it?
