by Puffs » Fri Dec 07, 2018 6:25 am
The retarding PD/Vape do at low RPM is good. It will reduce the likelihood of the engine kicking back, and should increase the low-end power. Because of the low piston velocity in that RPM range, if the ignition occurs at 22°bTDC it will still be several ms before the piston reaches TDC. Retarding it by, say, 10° improves things quite a bit - less kick-back & more power (=running more effectively).
The high-end retarding in these PD/Vape systems is far less than at the low end. Consider that these engines rarely do more than 6-7kRPM, it's about 1° at best, and I'd say that's inconsequential. That retarding too is probably not by design either, but also to do with the frequency response of coils, or something along those lines.
There is a case to be made for advancing the ignition timing at the high RPM end, rather than retard it as happens to some extent with PD/Vape. This is because at that end, the high piston speed leaves too little time for the flame front to develop, so that the maximum pressure comes after the piston has been at TDC. If you ignite to late, you're missing part of the power the engine can develop: the engine runs less efficiently. In 4T engines this case is clear, and they all have advance mechanisms (historically mechanical, using centrifugal force, but nowadays electronic). For 2T engines, maybe that's too simple a view, because there are several other processes going on (like that at high RPM the mixture composition changes, the degree of scavenging/filling changes, + more). I think that historically, the majority of 2T engines did not have an advance mechanism, but I think that some had. The optimal ignition timing one could learn from dyno testing, or measuring the performance on the road. And it is likely to be different for different engines, depending on their state of tuning, etc, so the testing & measuring has to be done with a specific engine (here the ETZ250). Yet I suspect that the 'Handbuch Verbrennungsmotor' from 2002 deals exclusively with 4T engines.
If you want to look for applicable experience, maybe learn from experience in racing that has been done with 2T's for many years. I can share info from the manual for my YZ250LC. It's a 250cc 2T MX/race bike, tuned for a broad & strong power band. It has a reed valve on the intake & a variable exhaust timing; max power is not specified, but I've seen numbers ranging from 48 to 55HP (and even 62HP...). For the ignition timing they specify 1.2mm = 13.5° bTDC, which is a lot later than is customary for the ETZ (say 2.8mm or 22° bTDC). Presumably that will ease starting, but note they also specify "Advancer type: electrical". So it is being advanced, but I don't know by how much... Anyway, maybe that's not so applicable either. True, it's a 2T, but beyond that it's quite different from an ETZ.
IMO Testing & measuring on an ETZ250 would still be best.
Last edited by
Puffs on Mon Jan 06, 2025 7:30 am, edited 2 times in total.