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Long leads cause all kinds of havoc with radiated interference being picked up by the wiring and sneak paths for high energy back to the battery. It usually results in the hall sensor blowing. Also, connect things exactly as the diagram shows (short and direct) There must be a direct lead from the engine block (spark plugs) back to the battery. Do not assume that a round-about ground connection will suffice. Also the hall sensor should have all three wires shown tightly twisted together and connected directly back to the circuit. Again - don't assume that because a wire eventually finds it's way to where it needs to go that that will suffice.
The high energy spark current / voltage will be looking for any path it can find back to the battery so it must be directed properly so it doesn't try to follow say your hall sensor wiring back to the battery.
I'm not sure what coil you plan to use. If it's a standard automotive coil of 12v then you'll need a ballast resistor of maybe 2 ohms and 25 watts. The current should probably be limited to 5 or six amps. There is no real need for a high power ignition system on a model. It's just a waste of power.
I (and many others) use four AA Nimh rechargeable batteries (approx 6v) in a holder and a Ford 12v COP coil (small). I don't use a ballast resistor because the batteries themselves limit the current. So this makes a nice compact arrangement.
BUT something must limit the current. It depends on what coil you're using how much it will try to draw.
Don't run the system on a power supply. Power supplies will not supply the pulse current reliably and it will likely give poor results.
The high energy spark current / voltage will be looking for any path it can find back to the battery so it must be directed properly so it doesn't try to follow say your hall sensor wiring back to the battery.
I'm not sure what coil you plan to use. If it's a standard automotive coil of 12v then you'll need a ballast resistor of maybe 2 ohms and 25 watts. The current should probably be limited to 5 or six amps. There is no real need for a high power ignition system on a model. It's just a waste of power.
I (and many others) use four AA Nimh rechargeable batteries (approx 6v) in a holder and a Ford 12v COP coil (small). I don't use a ballast resistor because the batteries themselves limit the current. So this makes a nice compact arrangement.
BUT something must limit the current. It depends on what coil you're using how much it will try to draw.
Don't run the system on a power supply. Power supplies will not supply the pulse current reliably and it will likely give poor results.
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