The CDI ignition circuit produces a spark from an ignition coil by
discharging a capacitor across the primary of the coil. A 2uF capacitor is
charged to about 340 volts and the discharge is controlled by an SCR.
A Schmitt trigger oscillator (74C14) and MOSFET (IRF510) are used to drive
the low voltage side of a small (120/12 volt) power transformer and a voltage
doubler arrangement is used on the high voltage side to increase the capacitor
voltage to about 340 volts. A similar Schmitt trigger oscillator is used to
trigger the SCR about 4 times per second. The power supply is gated off during
the discharge time so that the SCR will stop conducting and return to it's
blocking state. The diode connected from the 3904 to pin 9 of the 74C14 causes
the power supply oscillator to stop during discharge time. The circuit draws
only about 200 milliamps from a 12 volt source and delivers almost twice the
normal energy of a conventional ignition circuit. High voltage from the coil is
about 10KV using a 3/8 inch spark gap at normal air temperature and pressure.
Spark rate can be increased to possibly 10 Hertz without losing much spark
intensity, but is limited by the low frequency power transformer and duty cycle
of the oscillator. For faster spark rates, a higher frequency and lower
impedance supply would be required. Note that the ignition coil is not grounded
and presents a shock hazard on all of it's terminals. Use CAUTION when
operating the circuit. An alternate method of connecting the coil is to ground
the (-) terminal and relocate the capacitor between the cathode of the
rectifier diode and the positive coil terminal. The SCR is then placed
between ground and the +340 volt side of the capacitor. This reduces the
shock hazard and is the usual configuration in automotive
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