TIP: Click on subject to list as thread! ANSI
echo: oldcars
to: CLIFF JOBE
from: ALEXANDER BILAN
date: 1997-04-29 19:53:00
subject: split fire plugs

You where writing to Mike Eyre;
>  and then drilled a little bitty hole right in the center of it. Then 
>  he took, and squared up the electrode right over the center electrode 
>  and made sure that it was nice and even.  Then he would fire them with 
>  and old Model "T" coil, to test them out, and they would make a perfect
>  tube of blue fire.  I had never seen anything like it before, but saw 
 And in a real engine, that would last until the plug fouled up. Then no
more hole.
>  years ago, but apparently someone decided to do some experimenting with
>  plug electrode design and came up with the Split Fires.  Now I don't
Many moons ago. Somebody probably started tinkering when the first engine
came along.
>  I have to say they have performed well.  Although I have not seen the 
>  gas mileage increases that will match their claims. 
Did you observe any changes in fuel usage over a few thousand miles?
>  The fire will be distributed equally between the "two prongs" as you
> called 
>  them because they are still both part of the same ground electrode. 
>  And as long as all the distances are equal.  I have been studying
> electronics
>  for two years, and have observed that when, fire is pushed through a 
>  parallel circuit that current will always take the path of the least 
>  resistance. However, if they are of an equal resistance then the same 
>  amount of current will flow down both sides and in the case of the
> Split Fire
Air gaps and Resistors are two VERY different things. You cannot equate the
two for resistance.
BTW, the spark is voltage induced and has very little, if any bearing on the
amount of current in the circuit.
>  spark plugs the prongs as you have called them are still both part of
> the 
>  same electrode.  There should be no difference in the resistance, all
> things 
>  being equal, the same amount of current should be flowing down both 
>  the prongs as you have called them.  Therefore the fire should be
> flowing 
>  from the split ends equally, unless something is happening to the law
> of 
>  physics, or you can try to clarify your position some, on why you think
In an engine, the air/fuel ratio is NOT consistant anywhere in the cylinder.
The splitfire plugs rely on the spark jumping the easiest of two paths. And
I would say that holds true for the rapidfire plugs as well.  But, I do
notice you corrected yourself on this matter further down.=)
 As another example, look at rotary engine plugs, two ground electrodes 180
degrees from each other.  You still only get one spark, it will again take
the path of least resistance.   That little fact does make a case for these
plugs, but certainly not the price they command. If I really wanted them,
I'd take a dremel to ordinary plugs. 
However, given todays engines with highpowered electronic ignitions, the
spark will spark under just about any condition to fire off the mixture.
That little tidbit is what makes high priced normal material plugs
pointless. You WILL get spark regardless of plugs used.
>  that the fire will flow more down one side or the other, and not both 
>  at the same time. Granted that a lot of this stuff is just marketing,
>  but don't say it can't do it, when it can and does. 
I don't say they don't work. They still make a spark at the required time.
Most of us feel that the spark will occur regardless of plug. Platinum,
Split Fire, Rapidfire, Coppercore, or Unobtainium. =)
 | AmiQWK 2.7 - S/N 0261 |
... The truth shall make you free, but first it shall piss you off.
--- OLMS 2.60p.a1+ [EPMBP73M]
---------------
* Origin: Multiboard * 519-660-3574 * Internet * 4GB * (1:2401/0)

SOURCE: echomail via exec-pc

Email questions or comments to sysop@ipingthereforeiam.com
All parts of this website painstakingly hand-crafted in the U.S.A.!
IPTIA BBS/MUD/Terminal/Game Server List, © 2025 IPTIA Consulting™.