Couple (two for the price of one) of queries for the electrical wizards amongst us.
First, distributor advance springs. Am using a Lucas DKX2 distributor on the project (should I call it a special now it's running and registered?). The advance has two springs, both .730" measured inside the loops with 9 coils and wire thickness of .029". Measuring the advance curve using a strobe and the machine's rev counter, I got half advance around 1700rpm and full a shade under 3,000. I'd like to get the advance in sooner, especially the first half. So does anyone remember the 60's car distributors which had a light and a strong spring - where the lighter was in tension at rest but the stronger one slack, to pick up its load later? More to the point, where I might get some?
Secondly, am slowly progressing with the starter design, mainly held up waiting for parts like bearings etc. But my main concern is that as I'm using a ratchet instead of a spragg clutch, it may engage with a bang that could be destructive. Now some diesel engines have a clever design of starter whereby only two field coils are energised until the bendix is fully engaged, whereupon the other two are connected and the full 1,000A does its job. No room on the diminutive motorcycle starters for that, I'm afraid, but would like nevertheless to create a 'soft start'. I'm thinking of maybe having a separate button that supplies, say, 3 or 4 volts to the starter to engage with the engine, after which I'd hit the usual start button. I'm using a Firestorm starter (known to start a short-stroke 1,000cc high-compression bike) together with a 200A CCA 12V battery. Could I achieve what I want with a resistance and, if so, what Ohms would be suitable?
Thanks in advance for any assistance,