View Full Version : Been Busy today
AshG
24th October 2009, 10:51 PM
have had fun today testing my megajolt on the work bench. i am pleased to say everything works as it should :D
here is a little vid just to show all you oldies out there how easy it is to do electronic ignition.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=02cKizZzJWw
fabbyglass
24th October 2009, 11:30 PM
Work of the devil.....what's wrong with points 'n carbies;)
dogwood
24th October 2009, 11:33 PM
Looks good mate,
Now all ya got to do is fit it in the car...:D
If ya need a hand don't ask me....
If a compoota is involved then I ain't ya man....(Old man that is):rolleyes:
David
tkpm
24th October 2009, 11:35 PM
This may sound stupid, but whats a megajolt :o
londonsean69
24th October 2009, 11:42 PM
Let me google that for you :D (http://tinyurl.com/yhbqofq)
The megasquirt was designed to run fuel injection, so is a standalone ecu, capable of running injection, ignition etc.
The megajolt is a cut down version that only does the ignition map
dogwood
24th October 2009, 11:48 PM
This may sound stupid, but whats a megajolt :o
What I get when I open my Barclaycard bill at the end of the month...:eek:
fabbyglass
24th October 2009, 11:56 PM
Dogbloke
I ran out of time to get a pair of wings made... but the bloke who also does grp where my daughter is doing seats might just have some kicking about.
AshG
24th October 2009, 11:59 PM
fitting is well underway
http://i707.photobucket.com/albums/ww75/ashgardiner/P1030081.jpg
gingea1pom
25th October 2009, 09:51 AM
Ash,
That looked fantastic. What where you adjusting with the screwdriver?
I understand the concept but have never used one. From the vid I guess there is no conventional dizy envolved all the 'timing' is done by the toothed wheel?
I really will ring today some time sorry, the whole family is sick exept me!!
Rik178m
25th October 2009, 11:24 AM
It was the Throttle Position Sensor I think.
Wow that looks cool! wayyyyyyy beyond my skills at the min though!
gingea1pom
25th October 2009, 11:32 AM
I have just spent an hour or two googling megajolt.
My head hurts
Bonzo
25th October 2009, 07:40 PM
I have just spent an hour or two googling megajolt.
My head hurts
:D :D
Quite straight forward realy. Even easier if you are using a CVH or Zetec engine ( No need for a trigger wheel as it is already there )
Ash
Some more first class work from your project :cool:
Perhaps I could set mine up in the lathe & use it as a RPM indicator ( The speed markings went many moons ago !!?? ) :D
AshG
25th October 2009, 08:46 PM
ronnie you can actually get little toothed wheels that go on the back of the headstock with a little optical sensor and digital read out. they are really good for converting older lathes to digital read out. i have got to the point where i dont really need the read out on the lathe but it is allways handy
davidimurray
25th October 2009, 10:11 PM
Looking great Ash - you're certainly ploughing on with your build - keep the updates and the pics coming.
Cheers
Dave
Bonzo
25th October 2009, 10:18 PM
ronnie you can actually get little toothed wheels that go on the back of the headstock with a little optical sensor and digital read out. they are really good for converting older lathes to digital read out. i have got to the point where i dont really need the read out on the lathe but it is allways handy
Oooohh that sound interesting Ash
Being a complete novice with all things lathe related, I need all the help I can get. :o :o
I do suprise myself at times though, I do manage to do what I set out to do in the end & without any tooling breakage. :confused: :)
AshG
25th October 2009, 11:22 PM
what bugs me is that i allways manage to kill the expensive carbide tooling but never the cheep hss stuff.
davidimurray
26th October 2009, 01:00 PM
Ash
Hope i'm not teaching you to suck eggs, but using carbide tooling on a small lathe is very difficult - they like big hard heavy cuts and generally when cutting below about 10thou they tend to rub rather than cut. Small lathes tend to lack the rigidity to take the loads so you better off with HSS. The one exception to this is I tooled out my little CNC lathe with some tipped tooling but got inserts with 0.1 and 0.2mm nose radius. These are fantastic and are razor sharp to touch - I can take half thou cuts with them. So if you do want Carbide tooling I suggest you go for the smallest nose radius possible.
Cheers
Dave
AshG
26th October 2009, 01:26 PM
i don't normally use carbide on the little lathe as its not worth the cost. i normally kill them on the big lathe doing silly things that they haven't been designed for :D the problem is that the big lathe lives somewhere else at the moment as i don't currently have space for it. this means most little jobs get done on the mini lathe but take double the time. the big lathe is a 36ich harrison that can quite easily manage 4mm cuts if i had it wired up on 3 phase. it currently has a 3hp single phase motor in it but i will change it back when it goes in my new workshop that i plan to build after the roadster :D
londonsean69
26th October 2009, 01:54 PM
I found that with my lathes.
The carbide tooling was rubbish on the mini lathe, but works quite nicely on the Myford.
I treated myself to one of those indexable boring bars, with a 12mm shaft - can actually take a proper cut with it.
Hogging out the centres on my mushroom inserts took ages with the little lathe (hours), 25mins on the myford!!
AshG
26th October 2009, 05:18 PM
i didnt bother turning my hub inserts. i managed to buy them in for less than the cost of the material from mnr.
i only tend to use the lathe when i cant buy something off the shelf or if i already have the material kicking around.
flyerncle
26th October 2009, 06:17 PM
Nice one Ash,very informative and interesting and some of us oldies
understand the dark side of pointless ignition systems.:p
londonsean69
26th October 2009, 10:14 PM
i didnt bother turning my hub inserts. i managed to buy them in for less than the cost of the material from mnr.
i only tend to use the lathe when i cant buy something off the shelf or if i already have the material kicking around.
I did think about buying them in, but I also wanted to learn how to use the lathe.
Glad I did make them, even though they ended up too small:D through me just not concentrating:rolleyes:
So I have to re-make them.
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