Posted by mcallan on April 26, 2005, 11:05 pm
Does anyone know the voltages produced by the charge coil, pulse coil,
and cdi box on a 1983 it250. I have a nasty high speed miss, and
resistance test show nothing. Thanks
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Posted by mike on April 27, 2005, 3:40 am
mcallan wrote:
> Does anyone know the voltages produced by the charge coil, pulse coil,
> and cdi box on a 1983 it250. I have a nasty high speed miss, and
> resistance test show nothing. Thanks
>
I'd be interested in those numbers too.
Just out of curiosity, how are you gonna measure 'em at high speed.
I've been seen zooming down the road at 65 in the dark with an
oscilloscope duct-taped to the tank. But I didn't learn anything
useful...except that the waveforms while it was misbehaving
looked just like the ones when it wasn't.
Gonna try a digital storage oscilloscope this week...as soon as I get a
LOT more duct tape.
mike
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Posted by Bownse on April 27, 2005, 8:02 am
mike wrote:
> mcallan wrote:
>
>> Does anyone know the voltages produced by the charge coil, pulse coil,
>> and cdi box on a 1983 it250. I have a nasty high speed miss, and
>> resistance test show nothing. Thanks
>>
>
> I'd be interested in those numbers too.
>
> Just out of curiosity, how are you gonna measure 'em at high speed.
> I've been seen zooming down the road at 65 in the dark with an
> oscilloscope duct-taped to the tank. But I didn't learn anything
> useful...except that the waveforms while it was misbehaving
> looked just like the ones when it wasn't.
>
> Gonna try a digital storage oscilloscope this week...as soon as I get a
> LOT more duct tape.
> mike
>
>
What? You ain't got your portable interociter built yet?
--
Mark Johnson, Ft. Worth, TX, RCOS#7, EOB
http://www.bikes-n-spikes.org
Save your breath. You'll need it to blow up your date.
Posted by krusty kritter on April 27, 2005, 12:55 pm
Bownse wrote:
> What? You ain't got your portable interociter built yet?
I remember the first interocitor I ever saw. It was so trick, it was
like,
alien!
I vaguely remembered the term "interocitor" from an old science fiction
movie that was like, "golly, gee whiz!" exciting back in 1954 when I
saw it in the Ojai, CA movie theatre
The idea is intriguing, 'what would happen if you found a manual of a
super high tech machine that seems to be based on scientific ideas no
one has seen or heard before.'
"This Island Earth" starts with an engineer, Cal Meacham, receiving an
order of parts that look impossible. When Cal asks for a catalogue from
the company, he receives a listing of parts that shouldn't exist and
instructions on making a device called an interocitor. Forgetting the
adage about curiousity killing the cat, Cal orders the parts to make
the interocitor. Single mindedly Cal forges ahead more interested in
the engineering and science than what it could mean. Cal doesn't see
the danger to himself and the earth until it is too late to stop.
Cal and his girl friend are kidnapped by alines in a flying saucer
while flying in Cal's airplane as I recall, and they are pulled aboard
by a tractor beam and learn all about an interplanetary war and about
mutants...
That was the first time I'd ever heard the term "mutant". The mutant in
TIE
had an exo-skeleton, lobster claws, big googly eyes and a brain that
was exposed, too big for its skull, if it had a skull at all...
After seeing TIE, other teenage kids in my class started calling a
quiet student "Marv the Mutant". He wasn't retarded, just your ordinary
garden variety moron, but smart enough to keep quiet and not expose his
lack of intelligence and he'd been called "Marv the Mute" before the
kids saw TIE...
Posted by Bownse on April 27, 2005, 1:40 pm
krusty kritter wrote:
> Bownse wrote:
>
>
>>What? You ain't got your portable interocitor built yet?
>
>
> I remember the first interocitor I ever saw. It was so trick, it was
> like,
> alien!
>
> I vaguely remembered the term "interocitor" from an old science fiction
> movie that was like, "golly, gee whiz!" exciting back in 1954 when I
> saw it in the Ojai, CA movie theatre
>
> The idea is intriguing, 'what would happen if you found a manual of a
> super high tech machine that seems to be based on scientific ideas no
> one has seen or heard before.'
>
> "This Island Earth" starts with an engineer, Cal Meacham, receiving an
> order of parts that look impossible. When Cal asks for a catalogue from
> the company, he receives a listing of parts that shouldn't exist and
> instructions on making a device called an interocitor. Forgetting the
> adage about curiousity killing the cat, Cal orders the parts to make
> the interocitor. Single mindedly Cal forges ahead more interested in
> the engineering and science than what it could mean. Cal doesn't see
> the danger to himself and the earth until it is too late to stop.
>
> Cal and his girl friend are kidnapped by alines in a flying saucer
> while flying in Cal's airplane as I recall, and they are pulled aboard
> by a tractor beam and learn all about an interplanetary war and about
> mutants...
>
> That was the first time I'd ever heard the term "mutant". The mutant in
> TIE
> had an exo-skeleton, lobster claws, big googly eyes and a brain that
> was exposed, too big for its skull, if it had a skull at all...
>
> After seeing TIE, other teenage kids in my class started calling a
> quiet student "Marv the Mutant". He wasn't retarded, just your ordinary
> garden variety moron, but smart enough to keep quiet and not expose his
> lack of intelligence and he'd been called "Marv the Mute" before the
> kids saw TIE...
>
Back story was that the studio MADE them put the mutant in. It wasn't
originally part of the movie; being straight SciFi in content. The
studio felt that a B.E.M. was needed to draw the audience numbers they
wanted.
Sadly, this title isn't yet on DVD. "When Worlds Collide", "From Earth
to the Moon", and "Forbidden Planet" are though. Maybe, in time, TIE
will be too.
--
Mark Johnson, Ft. Worth, TX, RCOS#7, EOB
http://www.bikes-n-spikes.org
"I tell ya, if I had a railroad car full of shotgun shells...." - Rigger
> and cdi box on a 1983 it250. I have a nasty high speed miss, and
> resistance test show nothing. Thanks
>