INDUCCION
INDUCCION
INDUCCION
The stator is a coil of wire that wraps around a weak PM, which
provides a stationary field. As the reluctor spins, the teeth interact with
the stator, changing the magnetic field, which triggers the ignition
module. The stator may have only one projection with a stationary coil
of fine enameled wire wound around it; or it may have a circular PM
wrapped in fire wire, with a number of projections that matches the
number of engine cylinders. If the lines of force do not cut across the
magnet, then no current has been induced. As the armature (reluctor)
rotates, the teeth on the reluctor approach and pass the stator teeth,
changing the air gap between them. When a tooth approaches the
magnet, it reduces the reluctance near the field, pulling the magnetic
field out of position, causing the lines of force cutting across the
windings of the coil (known as exciting) to generate a positive voltage.
When the teeth are in alignment, the magnetic field is at its strongest,
but at that point, it is not changing. Voltage and current now fall to
zero. After the tooth passes the coil, it detours the magnetic lines of
flux from the PM in the pickup coil, generating a negative voltage. The
negative voltage is caused by the magnetic field collapsing back into
its original position. Since polarity changes every time the teeth
approach and leave the stator teeth, the voltage produced is an
alternating current (AC) voltage, and current flow is also alternating
(FIGURE 13-7). The voltage is sent to the ignition module, where it is
converted and amplified to a digital signal. The module then uses the
signal to control current flow through the ignition coil primary.
FIGURE 13-7 A typical ignition pickup coil scope pattern. Here the
technician is looking for a crisp, clean waveform that can trigger the
ignition module precisely.
The turn on dwell signal is sent from the triggering device to the
module. After the positive pulse has been received, the dwell control
section of the ignition module determines when the primary circuit will
be switched on and for how long current will flow in the primary
winding. The module, or PCM on later systems, determines when to
fire the coil based on system voltage, internal coil temperature, engine
rpm, and other input sensor data. The goal is to begin the dwell period
soon enough in advance of the spark event that the coil’s primary
current flow is sustained enough to fully saturate the coil, reaching its
full energy potential. To protect the coil, many coil electronics include
a current-limiting device within the control circuit that limits maximum
current flow to a safe value. After reaching the desired current level,
the module maintains the target current by partially turning the coil
driver transistor off. Partially turning the driver off prevents any
additional rise in current flow to the coil. Limiting current flow through
the coil causes heat buildup in the coil driver transistor. To control
damaging heat buildup the module’s goal is to keep the current limit
time as brief as possible.
Current limiting is visible on an oscilloscope waveform as the trace
flattens at the top of the waveform after the ramp. The current level is
maintained until the transistor completely turns off, completely
releasing the ground, causing the coil to fire. The transistor release is
the vertical drop-off in the trace just before the firing line from high
amperage to near 0 amps. The vertical line is as important as the
current ramp. If the vertical drop is sloping or not “clean,” it indicates
that the transistor may be failing to reduce the induced voltage into the
coil secondary.
Ignition coils used in electronic ignition systems are referred to as
low-inductance coils because their primary winding resistance and
number of turns are low. When using a lower inductance coil, the
current flow is much higher, and it reaches its optimum level sooner
than with contact breaker-point systems. A standard electronic ignition
coil’s primary resistance ranges from 0.5 to about 2.0 ohms.
According to Ohm’s law, the calculation suggests that the current flow
in the primary circuit approaches 28 amps. The math is 14 volts
divided by 0.5 ohms, which equals 28 amps. Actual current flow in a
properly operating circuit, however, is much less, for several reasons.
The first reason is the inductance of the primary coil windings
(FIGURE 13-9). The reduction or slowing of current flow in a circuit or
coil of wire due to induction is called inductive reactance. Like
resistance, inductive reactance reduces the flow of current in a circuit.
The definition of inductance is the property of a component that
opposes the change of current flowing through it. Several laws explain
why reactance slows current flow. Oersted’s law states that a
constant electric current flow generates a magnetic field around the
conductor. Faraday’s law of induction states that a magnetic field
induces a current in a conductor within that field. The final law to apply
to coil operation is Lenz’s law, which states that the induced current
flows in the opposite direction from the initial change in current that
produced the magnetic field. This phenomenon is called self-
inductance. Therefore, ignition coils work off the principles of mutual
induction and self-induction.
FIGURE 13-9 Current flowing in a coil of wire produces a magnetic field
that forms concentric circles surrounding the conductor that join to
form larger loops that surround the coil. When the current increases in
one loop, the expanding magnetic field cuts across some or all of the
nearby loops of wire, inducing a voltage in these loops when current
flow changes. This induced voltage is then transferred to the
secondary windings when current flow stops.