Welcome! Please use the navigational links to explore our website.
PartsASAP LogoCompany Logo Auction Link (800) 853-2651

Shop Now

   Allis Chalmers Case Farmall IH Ford 8N,9N,2N Ford
   Ferguson John Deere Massey Ferguson Minn. Moline Oliver

Tractor Talk Discussion Forum

Placement of Ballast Resistor

Welcome Guest, Log in or Register
Author 
Thomas Donahy

01-15-2006 07:27:04




Report to Moderator

Dear John T., Bob, KEB, Duane Larson, Bob M., JD Clooney, and others, I need some more enlightenment on why the placement of the resistor before the coil is prefered. It was stated in a previous post that the return path for the secondary is across the plug gap through the block, and through the points and back to the coil.Also, that putting the resistor on the distributor side of the coil would be adding series resistance to the secondary return path. I don't buy this as the points are open while the spark plug is firing. Also, the condensor would act as an open circuit. Consequently, the secondary return path would be blocked from returning through the distributor. It would seem to me that the only return would be from the side electrode of the plug, through the block, battery, key switch, resistor, and coil primary, which is hooked to the secondary inside the coil. Since we are dealing with up to 20,000 secondary volts the addition of one to two ohms of series resistance would be negligible. Perhaps resistor placement somehow affects the primary circuit , but I don't see how. It seems that placement of the resistor after the coil would make it more difficult to bypass during start-up, but that is that is a technical rather than theoretical issue. Please elaborate!

[Log in to Reply]   [No Email]
Dwight - VA

01-18-2006 00:08:45




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to Thomas Donahy, 01-15-2006 07:27:04  
Good discussion.. some of my thoughts..

The ballast resistor should always be connected in the primary circuit of the coil.

To put the ballast resistor in the secondary circuit would affect the time constant charging of the condenser (capacitor), which is essentially in parallel with the breaker points, and is the only path for current from the coil to ground when the points open. Changing the time constant will change the engineered relationship between the coil and the condenser, probably resulting in an under-performing spark.

The ignition coil IS an autotransformer, meaning the primary and secondary share some of the same windings and no part of the internal windings should be grounded to the coil shell or the coil itself would be grounded and thus useless. The high voltage spark comes from a condition in the autotransformer called inductive kickback when the points open.

[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
Farmerfred

01-16-2006 19:21:11




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to Thomas Donahy, 01-15-2006 07:27:04  
N series Fords used a ballast resistor ahead of 6v coils, but other 6v tractors didn't. Why?

My H farmall is converted to 12v and has a 6v coil(original IH) and has a ceramic wire wond resister that cuts the voltage to 8!
It also has the IH 6v system condenser.

I read all the posts and am still confused! Sorry



[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
Gene-AL

01-17-2006 10:01:40




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to Farmerfred, 01-16-2006 19:21:11  
Farmerfred:
I don't know that this will answer your questions, but one of the problems of a points-coil-condenser (Kettering) ignition system is that the heavy current draw of the starter drops the battery voltage. How much voltage drop depends mainly on the age and condition of the battery, including whether it's fully charged or not. A lower battery voltage means less current flow in the coil when starting, and if the battery voltage drops too low, the plugs will get only a weak spark or simply won't have enough voltage from the coil to fire at all.
Other than just living with a tractor which won't start on an aged or undercharged battery, one solution for some improvement has been to add a resistor (or a resistance wire) between the ignition switch and the coil, use a coil designed for a voltage lower than the battery, and short out the resister by some switching method during starter operation to apply the full (but lowered) battery voltage to the coil. If the resistor were left out entirely, too much coil current during normal running would tend to overheat the coil and also force the points to break much higher currents which shortens point life.

I'm not familiar with the so-called "infamous" Ford *N ballast resistor, but I guess it could have a high positive temperature-variable resistance, which has low resistance when cold, then a higher resistance when heated by coil current, thus applying higher voltage to the coil when starting cold, then lowering coil voltage and current back to normal for the coil when warmed up. I don't know that this is accurate, but such a resistance would work.

The condenser's voltage rating is likely at least 200V or higher to withstand the much higher voltages across the coil's primary winding during magnetic field collapse when the plug fires, so there would be no need to change it for different voltages (6V to 12V).

My take... Hope it helps.

[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
Gene-AL

01-16-2006 14:47:48




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to Thomas Donahy, 01-15-2006 07:27:04  
Thomas,
My take on your original question: The return path from the sparkplug ground for the high voltage current has two low-impedance paths: One through the battery, switch, and ballast to the coil; the other through the condenser to the coil. The high-voltage arc current is very small (a few milliamps) compared to the primary current, and would have little, if any, effect on these two low voltage paths. Placement of the ballast resistor before or after the coil would seem not to matter, except for 12V switched starting.

It might be useful to consider the current in the two joined circuits which form the Kettering ignition system. The primary coil winding could have currents approaching 8-10 Amps with the points closed which will, through inductive field collapse in the coil primary, maintain that same current through the points at the instant they start to break open. Without a condenser in place, some of the stored energy will dissipate in a hot arc across the points, saping total field energy available for the high voltage ciruit which triggers at the same time. The arc will also erode the point contacts excesively. However, with the capacitor properly in place and initially at zero volts charge (the points had it shorted prior to this time), the high initial primary current can continue at point opening as the coil's field collapses and the condenser charges. The current then falls at a rate set by the capacity of the condenser. At point opening, all the coil voltages reverse in polarity and spike, then will oscillate (ring) back & forth (AC), falling to zero in a fraction of a second.

[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
Hermit

01-15-2006 17:07:59




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to Thomas Donahy, 01-15-2006 07:27:04  
Good discussion. I'll add my two cents worth. The ballast resistor and the coil make up a series resistance circuit duplicating a simple voltage divider circuit. The voltage drop across the coil and the voltage drop across the resistor will be the same no matter where they are in the circuit. So it doesn't matter where the resistor is located. In fact, Chrysler vehicles use to have the resistor between the coil and the distributor. You can adjust the maximum output voltage of the coil by adjusting the value of the resistor. We're talking the change of tenths of ohms. Lower resistance - higher voltage output but more points burning and maybe damage to the coil. Higher resistance - lower voltage output and may cause engine missing. As for secondary current return flow, I believe you may be thinking that battery current flow has something to do with coil induced current flow. They are actually two seperate electrical systems. Where electron flow from the battery causes a magnetic field to develop in the coil, it ends when the points open. The condensor just keeps the points from arcing so much. The moment the points open, the magnetic field collapses, resulting in a large electrical potential (thousands of volts) to develop. The electrical potential is like it's own battery, looking for a place to put all the excess electrons and return to a natural electrical balance. This electron flow goes toward the plugs because of the direction the wire is wound in the coil. At the plug, the electrons jump the gap because of the developed electrical potential. You could see how this electrical potential works if you look at an engine analyzer scope. On a normal running engine, the firing line may be around 5-8 kv since it takes that amount of voltage to jump the gap. However if you completely remove the plug wire, the firing line will go up to the maximum voltage the coil can put out since electrical potential will exist but has no place for the electrons to flow. In fact, that's how you can check the max voltage of the coil. Once the magnetic field collapse is complete, the electrical potential disappears and the cycle starts all over. Hope this helps. It's been fun.

[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
Bob

01-15-2006 11:12:40




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to Thomas Donahy, 01-15-2006 07:27:04  
Simple answer...

If you were to look at the oscilloscope tracings of a system with the resistor in the correct location, and with the resistor incorrectly placed between the points and the coil, they would differ.

The tracing of the system with the resistor between the coil and the points would look like the tracing of a system with a weak condensor.

I have a distributor machine, and an ignition 'scope, so I will try this. Getting a good picture of the trace may be another matter!

Guess I need a DSO!

[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
john in la

01-15-2006 09:18:53




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to Thomas Donahy, 01-15-2006 07:27:04  
While I am not an electrical engineer and can probably learn a thing or two from them I will give it to you in layman terms the way it was explained to me years ago in mechanic school.

(12v system)
Power is provided to the coil windings. A resistor is put before the coil and the coil is made to work on this reduced voltage (6 to 8 volts) so we can bypass the resistor during start up for a hotter spark.
If we put the resistor after the coil some will argue that the same amount of power is running through the coil but this does not allow us the opportunity to bypass it during start up.
The power then runs to the points which provide a ground when closed. When the points open this sudden loss of power running through the coil makes the electrical field collapse causing the coil to fire.
The condenser is in the system to provide a false ground for a split second so power will not jump the half open points causing them to pit prematurely.

[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
RodInNS

01-16-2006 19:00:03




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to john in la, 01-15-2006 09:18:53  
Well John,
Layman's terms or not, you understand the purpose of the BALLAST resistor..... I don't think I'm even going to weigh in on this one.
So how's the cleanup going after the hurricane down there? All's well I hope?

Rod



[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
Bob M

01-15-2006 09:09:42




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to Thomas Donahy, 01-15-2006 07:27:04  
Thomas - Your suspicion is correct: Placement of the ballast resistor has no effect on the primary circuit. A few thoughts:

----

1 - The coil primary (12 volts DC) and coil secondary (spark voltage) are connected at only one point: Both are grounded to the coil shell. Otherwise they electrically independent.

Consequently primary current can flow ONLY in the primary circuit and spark current can flow ONLY in the secondary. Ie. NO spark current flows through the primary ballast resistor.

----

2 - That said, since the primary is a simple series circuit the ballast resistor can located at any point in the circuit.

Between the ignition switch and the coil is the usual resistor location. (As you note, placing the resistor here makes it simple to bypass for starting.) However it can also go between the coil and the distributor, or (if there are no other loads fed off the ignition switch...) between the ammeter and the hot side of the ignition switch.

----

3 - Ignition park occurs the instant the ignition points open - ie. when they break the primary ciruit. (The high voltage is induced in the secondary by the collapse of the magnetic field that exists when current is flowing in the primary winding). Also the condensor does not act as an open circuit - rather it absorbs the voltage spike as the points separate to reduce arcing at the points.

----

Hope this makes sense!

[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
John T

01-15-2006 16:01:54




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to Bob M, 01-15-2006 09:09:42  
Bob, Perhaps I mis read your post, are you saying there's an internal wiring connection which connects the primary or secondary coils to the case/shell somewhere???? Thats a new one on me if so. However, Im never too old to learn so let me know. As far as I knew the ONLY connectiosn were the lil + and the lil - and the high voltage tower????? ??

Best wishes n God Bless yall

John T



[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
Bob M - oops...

01-15-2006 19:26:05




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to John T, 01-15-2006 16:01:54  
John T - you are indeed correct! A coil's primary winding is indeed electrically isolated. Only one side of the secondary winding is grounded to the coil shell.

I wrote my response before my morning coffee - not a good thing for me to do. Thanks for the catch!! ...Bob



[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
John T

01-15-2006 19:35:14




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to Bob M - oops..., 01-15-2006 19:26:05  
Thanks Bob, heck my mind is always on about half full at best, before or after coffee lol. I am hesitant to never say never cuz theres all sorts of coils n configuratiosn out there Ive never heard tell of, I think somewhere in this mess down below another gentleman spoke like one of the windings was case grounded, but I stillll never was aware of any such connections.

John T



[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
John T

01-15-2006 08:06:31




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to Thomas Donahy, 01-15-2006 07:27:04  
Good Morning Thomas, Great question and thanks for your curiosity. I love your type of questions and these sparky discussions. Im here to share and learn and help educate myself and hopefully, others, and NOT to argue, so I will begin and look forward to learning and discusisng this with others I hope follow.

First of all, I respectfully disagree with your conrentions about the condensor being an "open circuit" during firing. Although the points open which initiates the collapse of the magnetic field and the subsequent induction of low primary voltage over into the high voltage secondary (mutual inductance transformer action), the condensor (which is indeed an open circuit to DC EVENTUALLY) is not IMMEDIATELY an open circuit when voltage is first appied. A condensor is initially and briefly a "closed circuit" during the time it conducts current unti such time the opposite electrical charges have accumulated on its plate surfaces, ONLY AFTER WHICH it appears as an 'Open Circuit" and DC current flow stops, i.e. it stops conducting.

Sooooo oo, although the points are open as you say at firing, and its true a condensor eventually appears as an "open circuit" to DC, right after the points open SUCH IS NOT THE CASE. I dont have them in front of me, but have seen oscilloscope traces of what occurs in the Kettering Coil Ignition immediately after the points open, and what happens is theres some oscillations and ringig going on in that LC circuit back n forth from the condensor to the coils primary.

Its indeed true, the coil will still fire EVEN IF THERES NO CONDENSOR WHATSOEVER in the circuit HOWEVER the spark will not be quite as strong since theres none of the ringing and oscillations of current and energy transfer that takes place between the coils primary and the condensor when its in the circuit. If the condesnor were too large, there would be NO SPARK as the current flow through the coils primary would be over damped and slowwwww www to change (no necessary sudden field collapse) while if its too small the points will burn up quickly BUT STILL A SPARK. Its the right sized condensor with the right time constant to make the proper LC circuit which yields the maximum spark energy.

It has been my "understanding" that if an inductive wirewound ballast resistor is placed in between the coil and condensor, that it may hamper the ringing (back n forth energy transfer) described above plus may also waste some of that enerfy as it gets converted into pure heat versus potential magnetic/ inductive energy. Thats how I understand the ballast should be ahead of the coil NOT between the coil and the condensor.

NOTE: If I get time later (gotta go help my 82 yo mom) I will dig up some Kettering Ignition theory and try n join back in the discussion and your GREAT question. I cant wait to read other explanations so we may all learn something here.

Thanks agian Thomas, Best Wishes n God Bless, I will check in again later.

John T (long retired electrical engineer, i.e. a lil rusty lol)

[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
Allan in NE

01-15-2006 08:05:39




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to Thomas Donahy, 01-15-2006 07:27:04  
Thomas,

Primary and secondary are not "connected".

Allan



[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
KEB

01-15-2006 08:45:16




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to Allan in NE, 01-15-2006 08:05:39  
Quick explanation - I"m unfortunately at work this morning & can"t spend much time.

First, the high voltage pulse is not DC. The inductance of the coil and the capacitance of the condenser form a resonant circuit which "rings" when it is stimulated by the rapid collapse of the magnetic field in the coil when the points open. A mechanical analog of this is a guitar string which "rings" when it is stimulated by a pick. The wave form is actually a damped sinusoid, modified a little by the non-linear characteristics of the spark gap. The impedance through a capacitor (condensor) is a function of the rate of change of the applied voltage. A fast transient such as the high voltage output of the coil has a very fast rise and fall time and does in fact pass right through the condensor (with some phase shift, which is immaterial to this discussion).

If the pulse did not pass through the condensor, it would arc across the points and destroy them in short order. In fact, one indication of a failing condnesor is metal transfer from one point contact to the other as a result of the arc. If you ever encounter a set of points with a pit on one side and a corresponding mound on the other, the first place to look is the condensor.

Allan, the primary and secondary windings are in fact connected. Check a coil with an ohmmeter. The coil is a autotransformer, with the primary and secondary windings connected in series. There are only three connections, the "+" terminal which is the common connection between primary and secondary windings, the "-" terminal which is the "bottom" of the series windings, and the high voltage terminal which is the "top" of the series windings.

Hopefully, I"ll be out of here in a few hours today. If I get a chance in the next couple days, I"ll post a schematic (or a link to one) showing the current paths.

[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
Thomas Donahy

01-15-2006 11:40:26




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to KEB, 01-15-2006 08:45:16  
Dear electrical wizards,

Thank you for your responses, but I am still confused. The question is more than academic as I am presenting a workshop on point type ignition at the Gathering of the Green conference in March. Perhaps I can be more specific in my questions.
1. How does the secondary circuit return to the coil? Does it arc through condensor while the plug is firing? The voltage in the secondary is certainly dc as the spark line or I should say firing line is relatively flat on the scope and doesn't start to oscillate and become ac until the coil can no longer jump the plug gap. The circuit can't be completed through the points as they are open when the plug is firing. Does the secondary complete its path from the block, through the ground wire, through the battery,the key switch, and back to the junction inside the coil? Either way I don't see how the placement of an additional two ohms could possibly affect the secondary when you are dealing with up to 20,000 volts.

[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
JOHN t

01-15-2006 16:30:33




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to Thomas Donahy, 01-15-2006 11:40:26  
Thomas, The coil is an AUTOTRANSFORMER. The Low Voltage Primary and the High Voltage Secondary windings are connected together inside the coil at the coils lil + terminal. The High Voltage Secondary completes its circuit by exiting out the coils top high voltage terminal,,,,, ,thru the coil wire,,,,, ,,to and through the distributor cap and rotor,,,,, ,,to the plug wire,,,,, ,, and eventually the plug gap to frame ground. Thats the high voltage secondary circuit. The plug current is through the coils secondary to frame ground via the plug gap, its NOT through the points/condensor primary circuit..... ..... ..

The low voltage primary circuit is from the battery,,,,, to and through an ammeter,,,,, ,,to the switches BAT input terminal,,,,, ,,out the switches IGN terminal,,,,, ,,to and through the ballast resistor,,,,, ,,to and through the coils primary between its lil + and - terminals,,,,, ,to and through the closed points which has the condensor in paralell with them.

Once the points break open the condensor is sitting there empty and discharged and is initially a conductive device and it conducts curent until its plates are charged up then afterwards, its an open circuit to further DC. Immediately after the points open, theres some ringing oscillations in that LC circuit with energy transfer taking place between the condensor and the coils primary. An oscilloscope trace shows that and it eventually dampens out.

NOWWWWW WW if theres no condensor theres still a spark (but weaker) but the points would burn up quickly. If the condensor were to large, there would be NO SPARK cuz theres no sudden interruption of the current flow and at DC theres no transformer action. THEREFORE if the ballast which is inductive (wirewound resistor) is between the coil and condensor, the sparks weaker cuz some of the energy which properly passes between the coil and condensor gets used up as heat due the the impedance of the extra inductance or pure resistance, and if there, the normal ringing taking place between the condensor and coil would be changed. Its the proper size (NOT too large or small) that yields the strongest spark and if you place additional inductance or resistance in that ringing LC circuit the parameters get all changed. PLACE THE BALLAST AHEAD OF THE COIL !!!!! !!!

On every make n model n brand of the Kettering coil ignition Ive ever seen, therefore, the ballast is ahead of the coil NOT between the coil and condensor.

I gave that Ignition Seminar at GOG every year plus at the Two Cylinder Expo and the New York Expo, IM GLAD TO GET SOME HELP WELCOME ABOARD They have me giving four other electrical seminars this year whewwwww wwww

Hope to meet your there

Good Luck n God Bless

John T Nordhoff in Indiana

[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
mjj

03-26-2006 13:33:47




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to JOHN t, 01-15-2006 16:30:33  
recently bought a 1142 electronic ignition for my TO35 Ferguson with pertronix 40511 coil. Tractor is 12 volt, negative ground.I have 12 volts at the coil. (power lead comes down from switch to - side of coil(as had)where the black wire from distributor connects and red wire connect to + side of coil) engine cranks just fine. continuity thru the dist. cap is good. still no spark.No current coming out of coil to dist cap.it is like the electronic module is doing nothing. Had some difficulty seating the magnet spool onto the rotor, but is seated all the way down. the dist cap cover closes just fine. there seems to be a natural .025 gap.Why no spark. what else can I test. No meter jump on coil while cranking the engine. Is something backwards? 12 volt coil is wrong? same wiring as had b4 electronic ignition add on. Had no spark condition prior to the upgrade. thought the coil was bad.had no ballast resister b4. Don't know if old coil was 6 or 12V

[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
Thomas Donahy

01-15-2006 12:04:55




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor Continued in reply to Thomas Donahy, 01-15-2006 11:40:26  

Sorry but I ran out of space on the prior post The primary and secondary are connected inside the coil but not in series as one responder said. I have never seen an engine run without a condensor. Also, I was always taught that the condensor precipitates a quick collapse of the magnetic field and that the primary oscillations have no bearing on the secondary as current is already flowing across the plug gap. So far I agree with Bob M. that resistor placement makes no difference. I have an open mind however. I hope Dell and Clooney reply.

[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
Gary Schafer

01-15-2006 16:01:58




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor Continued in reply to Thomas Donahy, 01-15-2006 12:04:55  
I see that you got many answers to your question.

Some coils may have the bottom end of the high voltage winding grounded to the coil case. Others do not. They are wired with the primary and secondary in series so they look like an auto transformer. They both function in the same manor however. It is only a difference of how the secondary winding gets to ground. In the case of the series wound coil the secondary gets its ground through the battery terminal on the coil. Some of the secondary current does pass through the condenser as well.


The condenser is not there to provide any type of tuned circuit or to cause the circuit to ring for its performance. As soon as the points open the field of the charged core starts to discharge which charges the secondary coil and also the primary coil. The coils are charged to opposite polarity as the magnetic field is discharging.
The condenser is there only to keep the voltage on the primary from arcing over at the points. The primary voltage charges to several hundred volts as the magnetic field collapses.

Yes there will be some ringing due to the capacitor across the coil as it discharges but that is not its purpose. Its purpose is to limit the voltage rise so as not to damage the points. It does this by slowing down the voltage rise at the points while allowing the primary voltage to decay. Its size has to be chosen so as not to discharge too slowly so it allows the magnetic field in the coil to collapse fast enough to charge the secondary. Too large and it would dampen the discharge. Too small and it would allow the voltage across the points to rise too fast before the coil had enough time to diminish its voltage and the points would arc excessively.

As far as the ballast resistor on either side of the coil I don’t see where it would make much difference as the impedance of the primary circuit is so low compared to the secondary of the coil.

On cars with radio interference problems it was common to place a condenser at the positive terminal (battery terminal) on the coil to ground. This kept the return pulse current out of the wiring to the battery and other areas of the car so it didn’t radiate. A shorter path to ground.

As far as polarity of the coil goes I believe that a negative going spark is wanted at the spark plug. This makes the hot spark plug easier to discharge than a positive going pulse.

Regards
Gary

[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
Gary Schafer

01-15-2006 19:01:52




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor Continued in reply to Gary Schafer, 01-15-2006 16:01:58  
As a follow up on the condenser: If it were not there an arc would start at some time as the points were opening, as the magnetic field was collapsing, and the primary voltage rose to a certain level. When the arc occurred it would stop the collapse of the magnetic field (an arc provides a very low resistance). This would not allow the secondary voltage to rise to its full value as it would if the arc had not occurred at the points.

This is why the ignition system will still operate without a condenser but at reduced efficiency. The engine may run poorly in this condition. The points would also burn in a short time.

Regards

[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
John T

01-15-2006 15:58:08




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor Continued in reply to Thomas Donahy, 01-15-2006 12:04:55  
Thomas, Thats the Seminar I gave at GOG every year since it started. Ken and Mark and Terry said they had another gentleman who wanted to help, welcome aboard. Glad to get some help finally as they have me giving 4 other seminars or round tables next March at GOG IM GONNA BE PLENTY BUSYYYYY YY LOL

See my post somewhere down below as I claim resistor placement DOES INDEED MAKE A DIFFERENCE

John T

[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
Coloken

01-15-2006 09:08:03




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to KEB, 01-15-2006 08:45:16  
Would just add that one of the reasons for using a low voltage coil with a resister, as I understand it, is to reduce the turns/winding of the primary. This reduces the inductance value so it can be "tuned" with the capacitor. Resonant circuits like the radio fellows know. For old farmers, it best to look at the trace on a scope to understand it.



[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
John T

01-15-2006 08:54:53




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to KEB, 01-15-2006 08:45:16  
KEB, I enjoyed your post. I have seen diagrams showing a coils internal secondary/primary connection on EITHER side of the primary, i.e. some show it at the incoming + coil terminal, while others show it over on the other - terminal, eminating, of course, out the top high voltage tower.

Have you also seen internal wiring diagrams showing it on either side or always the same???

John T



[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
Coloken

01-15-2006 09:44:58




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to John T, 01-15-2006 08:54:53  
John, could this be why some coils are for positive or negitive ground systems? If so. we could use the wrong coil by reversing the connections.



[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
John T

01-15-2006 19:05:36




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to Coloken, 01-15-2006 09:44:58  
Coloken, that may be it, but I think its more that some of the diagrams Ive seen may simplY be WRONG. A coil will still fire if wired at reverse polarity, but the sparks weaker and the coils not as efficient and may run warmer.

John T



[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
KEB

01-15-2006 09:43:49




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to John T, 01-15-2006 08:54:53  
John,

I actually took one apart one time to make sure. At least the one I took apart was in fact an autotransformer, with the common point between the two windings at the "+" termonal. There"s a lot of "assumptions" posted to the internet that aren"t always necessarily correct.

I"ll post a schematic when I get a chance to get one drawn up.

Keith



[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
John T

01-15-2006 16:04:43




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to KEB, 01-15-2006 09:43:49  
Thanks Keith, Ive always considered them connected at the lil + terminal, but I did see a diagram once that showed otherwise??

John T



[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
old

01-15-2006 07:49:20




Report to Moderator
 Re: Placement of Ballast Resistor in reply to Thomas Donahy, 01-15-2006 07:27:04  
Well I can't get tecknical about it, been 25 years since I have done much in to the teck side of eletronics. But I know it just plain works better before the coil. may have to do with the way a coil works.



[Log in to Reply]  [No Email]
[Options]  [Printer Friendly]  [Posting Help]  [Return to Forum]   [Log in to Reply]

Hop to:


TRACTOR PARTS TRACTOR MANUALS
We sell tractor parts!  We have the parts you need to repair your tractor - the right parts. Our low prices and years of research make us your best choice when you need parts. Shop Online Today. [ About Us ]

Home  |  Forums


Copyright © 1997-2023 Yesterday's Tractor Co.

All Rights Reserved. Reproduction of any part of this website, including design and content, without written permission is strictly prohibited. Trade Marks and Trade Names contained and used in this Website are those of others, and are used in this Website in a descriptive sense to refer to the products of others. Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy

TRADEMARK DISCLAIMER: Tradenames and Trademarks referred to within Yesterday's Tractor Co. products and within the Yesterday's Tractor Co. websites are the property of their respective trademark holders. None of these trademark holders are affiliated with Yesterday's Tractor Co., our products, or our website nor are we sponsored by them. John Deere and its logos are the registered trademarks of the John Deere Corporation. Agco, Agco Allis, White, Massey Ferguson and their logos are the registered trademarks of AGCO Corporation. Case, Case-IH, Farmall, International Harvester, New Holland and their logos are registered trademarks of CNH Global N.V.

Yesterday's Tractors - Antique Tractor Headquarters

Website Accessibility Policy