Hi Scott,TheMonkey wrote:Al-
I appreciate your attention on this, and I will do my best to respond with diagnostics as you come up with thoughts on how to solve this.
Next couple days, I will report back with some comments on whether misses only come after warmup, and also on the higher RPMs.
If you come up with any new diagnostics in the ini file, I'll toss those in.
Thanks,
Scott.
Like Al indicates, when there is extra noise spikes it is one thing. In this case there are missing pulses. This can come from loose connections, ground issues, solder joint (I have seen this before), etc.
Since you are not intimidated to try out new ideas, here is something to try. Grab a headset stereo jack (I think these are 1/8"), the ones that you can plug into the microphone jack of a PC. I use a old headset and chop off the headset part, leaving the wire. If you strip the outer covering you will see a shield wire and two inner conductors. There are two because of the left-right channels.
What I would do is hook one of the channels (solid wires) to the output of the opamp on the MS circuit, and the shield to MS ground. Then plug this into the mic input on your computer.
Next, download Audacity and tell it to record, then run the engine. When you observe the miss, stop recording. You can then zoom into the datalog in Audacity to see if the miss is coming from the VR pickup+circuit.
Now, for 5-volt signals I have hooked up the mic input direct. But, there could be a chance that the signal (5V) is too much for the soundcard input. So you can make a simple voltage divider. I would take a 1K resistor between the solid conductor and shield, and a 10K resistor in series of the solid lead and the op-amp output. Also, do not run any serial cable b/w the computer and MS during this test because there could be a potential difference b/w serial cable ground and sound card ground.
- Bruce