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Ed asks: "what is the point of
grounding the P-lead if it is ground already? "
Answer: To keep it grounded.
A magneto has three main components, a dynamo, a high voltage
transformer and a distributor. The high voltage transformer has a
low number of turns primary and a high number of turns secondary.
Both primary and secondary have one lead grounded. On the
secondary the other lead goes to the distributor and then
eventually to the spark plug(s). On the primary the other lead of goes to the breaker
points (a cam actuated normally closed switch). The other side of
the points are connected to ground.
The P-Lead stud is connected to the point there the primary lead
is connected to the points. Therefore, when the points are closed
the resistance to ground will be zero ohms. When the points are
open the resistance to ground will be around an ohm or two, which
is the DC resistance of the primary winding.
In operation, the rotating magnet of the magneto produces an
alternating magnetic field in the core of the transformer. With
the points closed, the primary winding is shorted so a current is
generated by the changing magnetic field. This current generates
its own local magnetic field. When the points open, the current
goes to zero and the local magnetic field collapses quickly. Since
voltage is a function of the speed that a magnetic field changes
and the number of turns exposed to the change, the rapidly
collapsing field produces a high voltage in the secondary winding.
When the voltage gets high enough a spark is established.
If the P-Lead stud is shorted then the primary circuit is never
opened, the magnetic field never collapses quickly and the spark
is not generated.
Disconnect the P-Lead from the stud on the magneto and verify your
airplane's P-Lead is shorted to ground when the ignition is OFF
and open when the ignition is ON. The P-Lead stud on the magneto
will always be within a couple of ohms of ground.
Regards
Brent Regan
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