LS2 Coil Normal+ Connector

27.95
Price reductions

 

Historie:

Starting in 1997, General Motors used a new (for them) coil-near-plug
ignition system for the then new Corvette LS1 engine. The system
features eight coils (one per cylinder) mounted on the valve cover,
with short spark plug wires to connect the coils to the spark plugs.
The General Motors LS1 coils are not just conventional ignition coils.
Instead they are complete single-cylinder ignition systems. They
contain all the electronics for dwell limiting, current limiting, etc. These
coils are controlled directly by a low voltage, low current signal from
the sequencer. There is no intervening ignition module (like an EDIS or
GM DIS). Because the LS1 coils have the igniters built in, they make for
an easy installation and generate less electromagnetic noise in the
other wiring under the hood.

About LS2/Normal bobines:

The LS2 coil-near-plug coils are similar in form and function to the LS1
coils described above.
The LS2/Normal coil has no visible external aluminum heat sink near the
connector.


How to use:

The LS2 coil has 4 connections (as well as the high tension terminal
for the spark plug wire, of course):
A = Coil Primary Ground
B = Ignition low noise ground from ECU (ground)
C = Ignition digital signal from ECU (+5V)
D = +12V Supply to Coil Primary




The two capacitors are optional but recommended. The 1.0 µF capacitor
on the +12V is helpful, it is similar to the one used on EDIS. What it
does is provide brief energy storage for the discharge. The other
capacitor will help eliminate back-fed noise to the MegaSquirt controller.
Use a 100 pF to 0.001 µF cap on the TTL trigger input wire to ground.
What this does is shunt extremely fast noise spikes to ground and not
let them feed back to the MegaSquirt processor. The added capacitance
is minimal - with the series resistance of 1,000 ohms (in the controller)
and a 100 pF capacitor the RC 3dB time constant is 2πR × C = 0.6 microseconds.


The LS2 built in coil igniters (the amplifier that drives the coil's primary
current based on the sequencer signal) will follow the sequencer signal
pulse width. When the signal from the sequencer is high (3 to 5+ Volts -
with very little current from the controller, a few dozen milliAmps), the coil
current will be building. When the signal from the sequencer is pulled low
(shut off), the coil will spark. The duration of the signal from the megasquirt /
sequencer determines the dwell (though the coil igniter limits this to no more
than ~8 milliseconds).

The dwell should be set at 4 milliseconds input pulse trigger - going longer
does not generate any more spark current.

To get 4.0 milliseconds of running dwell, the nominal dwell parameters should
be set to:

 

 

  • Maximum Dwell 4.5 milliseconds
  • Maximum Spark Duration 2.0 milliseconds
  • Acceleration Compensation 0.5 milliseconds

 

Battery Voltage Compensation

Setting    Net Voltage    Dwell Compensation

-4.0          8.0 Volts       2.4 milliseconds

-2.0        10.0 Volts       0.9 milliseconds

0.0         12.0 Volts       0.0 milliseconds

2.0         14.0 Volts      -0.5 milliseconds

4.0          16.0 Volts     -0.9 milliseconds

This will give 4.5 - 0.5 = 4.0 milliseconds at 14.0 volts while running with the
alternator charging normally.

 

Accessories

Product Note Status Price
Crimping tool for Super Seal, Weather Pack, Bosch and other terminals, 14-20 gauge Crimping tool for Super Seal, Weather Pack, Bosch and other terminals, 14-20 gauge
136.95 €
Crimping tool Budget for Super Seal, Weather Pack, Bosch and other terminals, 14-24 gauge Crimping tool Budget for Super Seal, Weather Pack, Bosch and other terminals, 14-24 gauge
49.95 €
Display accessory details

Customers who bought this product also bought

Delivery weight: 500 g

Browse this category: LS2 Coil