John said:
A short in your tacho can take your primary to earth irrespective

of the existence of diodes and I am sure there are automotive examples that

you may have not observed. Tiny Tachs are notoriously unreliable,

And so the story goes that as many people as we have here on the net, we
have experiences that reflect negatively on one type system or another, for
virtually every part of the plane. I have never seen a tach drive short a
coil down, but have seen starter rings that were chewed and damaged due to
starter wear, and these would cause an erratic signal to your tooth counter
system. No I am not referring to a Hall Effect switch. If going to the crank
for a signal, I would use either the internal method found on many 4 and 6
cylinder GMs or the external mounted to the back of the balancer. MSD makes
a universal kit for crank trigger that can be retrofitted onto virtually any
engine.

Every system will have its strengths and weaknesses. Some guys are using
points due to simplicity and low voltage requirements. I find that medieval
when systems like one netter is using, the motorcycle CD system (I believe
Serge is, sorry if I got it wrong) that is very simple and very reliable.
Everyone will have to find their own comfort level with the system they
choose, and compromises made with each design. No system is 100% failsafe.
Especially in aircraft where they typically do not shim starters and an
experienced ear can hear the starter clashing in the ring gear, I would not
run a tooth counter, unless you like the same unreliability you say the Tiny
Tach has.

Colin Rainey
brokerpi...@bellsouth.net

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