Hi all, I have slot the holes with 3 mm on the stator but the markings apart is not 4 deg if measured, so how do you know it is 4 deg, can it be measured?
Tx
Hi all, I have slot the holes with 3 mm on the stator but the markings apart is not 4 deg if measured, so how do you know it is 4 deg, can it be measured?
Tx
It can be measured with a protractor, or a timing disk.[/QUOTE]
I did use a protractor and I know it is not the right way because the markings were about 2 deg on the protractor.
I was just curious about it would like to have it as accurate as possible.
Tx all
I did use a protractor and I know it is not the right way because the markings were about 2 deg on the protractor.
I was just curious about it would like to have it as accurate as possible.
Tx all
Doesn't need to be accurate. You are just going to advance it only enough to get a power gain.
It is a "try and see" sort of thing. Just make sure you still have the original marks to go back to.
Take the diameter of the stator (in mm's) where your timing marks are, multiply it by Pi (3.1416).
Take this number of mm's around the stator and divide it by 360 degrees.
The answer is how many mm make one degree.
So if the stator is 100mm (as an example) in diameter, multiply it by 3.1416 = 314.16
now divide 314.16 by 360 = 0.87mm per degree
4 degrees would be 0.87mm x 4 = 3.48mm
The real answer is to bump your stator ahead little bit by little bit, aware of what changes it makes and reacting to those changes.