timing lights

jay gravely

Seaman Apprentice
Joined
Dec 5, 2005
Messages
35
What is the difference between an advance timing light versus an inductive timing light?
 

Paul Moir

Admiral
Joined
Nov 5, 2002
Messages
6,847
Re: timing lights

With the advance timing lights you can set them so they go off a number of degrees off when the spark goes. For example, say the engine sparks at 20 degrees before top dead center. If you set the timing light with 20 degrees of advance, you'll see the timing pointer pointing right at the TDC mark.<br /><br />Normally that's used the other way, so you turn the knob on it until you read TDC, and then note that the spark is 20 degrees before that by the position of the knob.<br /><br />Normally all modern timing lights, advance ones included, are coupled inductively. This means you just clip a pickup over top of the plug wire rather than making a direct connection.<br /><br />I don't know of any outboard that requires an advance timing light. I guess it's useful on some cars. Some timing lights don't work well with an outboard's CDI or magneto ignition so get one you can return if it doesn't work out. It seems to be hit-n-miss: some expensive ones don't work at all and some cheap ones work just fine.
 

jay gravely

Seaman Apprentice
Joined
Dec 5, 2005
Messages
35
Re: timing lights

Thanks Paul. I have a Ferret88 digital tach-advance light. Hope it works in most applications
 
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