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Rev Counter Problems RESOLVED


Duckpit

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I have had my Smiths rev counter repaired by John Ostick, but unfortunately it works for about 10 seconds and then goes to zero. John was adamant that the repair was OK & suggested I go direct to the coil and connect up. But the problem persists.

As I know how good John is I thought I would give it a try on my Alpine V before I went back to John and of course it worked perfectly.!!

The dizzy has electronics from Simonbcc onboard as does the Alpine I think..

Any ideas appreciated?

Nick

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How strange.

  1. When you connected it directly to the coil were you using the existing power and earth or did you rig something new?
  2. Have you tried wiggling bits to restore function?
  3. The engine runs normally as that 10s expires?
  4. Do you have a multimeter?

Jonathan

PS: Alpine V as in Sunbeam?

 

 

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Hi Jonathan

When connecting direct to the coil I did not use any of the current wiring, so wiring is not my problem.

 My next step is to put a diode in line to prevent any bouncing pulses and I may even try a resistor these items cost pennies, then I guess change the coil and finally the electronic gizmo.

Yes I have a Sunbeam as my dry day normal use car, it rattles a bit but much nicer than than a modern tin top

Nick

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Oh yes, a dynamo with a separate voltage regulator, but I dont know how to sort the problem. One suggestion is that the voltage at the battery is too high, so am off to borrow a multimeter.

If it is too high, can I adjust at the regulator ?

Nick

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It would be interesting if John Ostick could tell you what the actual trigger condition is for the rev counter, then get an oscilloscope on the signal voltage being fed to it. For (a completely made up as i don't know the actuals, but it illustrates the point) example if it counts the number of times the voltage crosses upwards through 5V in a given time, and your signal voltage is swinging 4.5V to 10V, it will work fine but be a bit marginal; if a 1V increase in battery voltage then had it swinging 5.5V to 11V it would then read zero as the voltage would no longer pass through the 5V trigger level. A friend recently had a similar issue and it was a simple matter of adding a pull-up or pull-down resistor (costing pennies) to match the gauge to the signal. The problem may be gathering the data; if you managed to get a scope trace of the tacho signal you are getting, John would probably be able to tell you if the gauge should be able to work with that or if not, what it would take to match them properly.
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OK so I have over 16V at the battery, and when I discharge the battery the rev counter works for longer. I think that there are too many volts.

Fortunately there is a good video on Youtube which shows how to adjust the voltage so I will give that a try.

Unfortunately John hasn't exactly been helpful, my last response from him was just a load of ???????????????????????

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Sorted.

The voltage actually went up to 17.5V before adjusting. When adjusting down came the volts and up went the revs.

I had to buy a new voltage regulator when I was restoring the Lotus and now find out that these are not plug and play like modern devices but need calibrating. 

I guess I am lucky that I didn't burn out any other electronics.

Nick

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