Hey guys as the topics suggests, what are pros and cons of running a mag on a ford flathead v8? I'm very new to that sort of thing. Posted using the Full Custom H.A.M.B. App!
This should be interesting. I have never run a magneto or a car but lots of them on motorcycles. As you probably know magnetos create their own electricity (spinning magnet and coil, or vice versa), and the faster they spin the hotter the spark. Spark at starting speeds can be weak, that is why airplane magnetos have impulse couplings that actually snap the magneto around to help with the "spin". Maybe car magnetos have it too?
I run a magneto on a street driven Corvair. Never had an issue. Car runs like a champ and the cool factor is worth it. I will also run a mag on my 324 Olds powered, coupe that is under construction .
I will assume you are talking about street use. I have run H&C mags on several street engines. They work fine. They start easily. If you have an engine with a lot of compression, it will sometimes try to kick back when starting and bend the starter shaft or break the bendix spring if you are using a stock starter. A gear drive starter remedies this. The problem with the H&C mag is, no mechanical advance. Set it about 23 for the street and forget it. This a slight compromise for top performance or gas mileage. A way around this is to modify an Offy lead plate to take a twist lock type choke cable. You can play with the advance as you drive then. I have never run a Vertex type mag but some of them have mechanical advance in them and that would be good for the street. They start easily also.
running a vertex in my model A flathead roadster have driven it all over the country no problems, had it rebuilt by magtech in Indianapolis also had them install a mechanical advance, worth every penny I spent with them http://www.magtechignition.com/
How are they on spark plugs? We ran some Vertex mags on 413 Chrysler irrigation engines back in the 60's and plug life was a small problem.
Yep. Ran one on my bike for many years. Took it to an old Quonset hut at the Oakland airport to have the magnets recharged. Worked great but get a spot of water or oil in it and it'll refuse to fire. Had an old Wisconsin horizontal shaft engine I got from an old roofer's winch that had a Hunt impulse-coupler magneto on it. Stretched an old Bonanza minibike frame to fit it and it gave the Briggs Raptors a run for the money.
They're great! We've got a couple cars running Harmon Collins and they work very well and are very 'streetable'. If you are running a 1942-1948 two belt system you may have to run idlers on the fan belts though. The mags are quite a bit larger than the stock distributor and some have tendencies to hit the fan belt.
I've had the same ones in my Chevy for almost 7 years now and have beat it pretty good. The trick is in the wires. You gotta run the right wires. My 331 Cadillac has a Mag in it as well and has regular HEI wires on it. They are for a hotter spark and work just fine. The reason you had to change wires in the old days was due to the low resistance style old wires. A Mag would cook them quickly. On the flip side if you are running an old ignition points and condensor stuff you will be amazed at how much better your car will run with a set of honest to goodness low resistance wires. Plug wires are a very often overlooked aspect of the ignition system All the best, Tim
Hello. I'm just to modify a Vertex/hunt magneto for my Flathead. As we are doing dragracing, we don't need the built in advance. My Vertex that I bought from a friend, was refurbished by Hunt. It had 24 degrees built in (on crank). That should be a good set-up for street use. In order to use this on the street, one needs to set the static advance to "0" on the crank. the engine will start easy, then on higher rpm's, approx. 2000 rpm, you will get the 24 degrees. This is about the same as Pete1 said If you have an 8BA and don't have the magneto, you can buy an used magneto for sbc or bbc, and easily modify it to fit the 8BA. the picture show the difference between a 24 degree magneto vs. 0 degree magneto. K ................................. Taildragger&fenderless
In the early days of cars (like before WW1) magnetos were the best ignition, found on expensive cars. Then Delco came out with the coil ignition we are all familiar with and magnetos disappeared. Except on race cars and aircraft where their simplicity (no electrical system required) and hot spark at high speeds made them desirable. Today's electronic ignitions will equal or beat the best magneto. You can run one for the nostalgia kick but there is no longer a performance advantage, and a mag can have disadvantages in starting, cost, etc. as already described.
If you are running it on the street you will have to either run a separate kill switch. A mag does not use 12 volt input. It needs a ground to shut off the engine. I did one for a customer that wanted a key system with start and run. I hooked up the run side to a relay that when the power was turned off it grounded the mag.
Been running a Vertex mag made in 1978 on my 5 window since the two Taylor-Vertex look-a-like mags crapped out and Taylor-Vertex won't do anything about them. Starts immediately and runs fine. Wired it through a relay in order to power and ground the mag through the ignition key. Using Taylor Spiro-pro wires and spark plugs gapped at .020. Only draw back is "noise" emitted by the magneto as the rpm is increased which affects the electronic tach and speedometer. Working on using shielded wire which is grounded similar to that used on aircraft to see if this cures or lessens the problem.