Nology Power Core Coil Amplifier - Performance Forum

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Nology Power Core Coil Amplifier
Monday, October 09, 2006 6:23 PM
Is this Nology Power Core Coil Amplifier worth getting for my 2.4l cavalier.



Re: Nology Power Core Coil Amplifier
Monday, October 09, 2006 6:26 PM
saves gas and little bit quicker to get your upper rpms...

other than thats... its good to save gas!!!



Re: Nology Power Core Coil Amplifier
Monday, October 09, 2006 6:49 PM
junk


do a search on nology



Re: Nology Power Core Coil Amplifier
Monday, October 09, 2006 8:39 PM
junk

MSD
go big or go home



1989 Turbo Trans Am #82, 2007 Cobalt SS G85





Re: Nology Power Core Coil Amplifier
Tuesday, October 10, 2006 9:59 AM
This is a post I made some time ago, and it was quoted once recently by someone that had a weird misfire and subsequently found out Nology Hotwires (and their "amplifiers") are garbage.
JimmyZ wrote:I have two very big problems with Nology Hotwires that I've posted in the forums before, and maybe it's time I did again:

1. They advertise that they have a "capacitor" in the wires that makes the spark hotter. What they actually have is a wire braid that is wrapped around the wire itself, creating a capacitive effect. The problem is that by doing it that way, they are using the insulation of the wire as a capacitive dielectric which, at those voltage levels, will degrade the insulation. Internally, they are nothing but standard resistor core ignition wires that offer nothing to increase voltage delivered to the plugs.

2. They alter ignition timing. It's a simple fact that wires do not create sparks. Wires are simply the means of delivery for the voltage that is produced by the coils. A normal ignition system on a J, depending on engine RPM, will produce a spark that has a duration of 15-30 degrees of crankshaft rotation. That is a consistent, even spark that starts at the point the computer determines it needs to and fires as long as the coil's saturation level allows. That is through conventional wires (or contacts, in the case of IDI-style ignitions). Nology wires use their primitive little capacitive effect to store the voltage once it starts coming down the wire...charging the "capacitor" until the voltage stops coming...then releases it. Neat idea, except that the spark is now hitting the plug and your combustion chamber 15-30 degrees later than it was intended to. I guess a built in timing retard like that would be good for you boost and nitrous guys, but what about the NA crowd?

SO their advertising is 100% true...their wires deliver a hotter spark. What they fail to tell you is that the hotter spark is much shorter duration and is grossly mistimed.

So, the way I see it you have a wire that, by design, will slowly destroy itself. As an added bonus, you have a theory of operation that is potentially damaging to your motor and definitely isn't good for power production or fuel consumption.
In that post I only specifically mentioned their Hotwires product, but the same "technology" is used on their Amplifier products as well. At one point when we had a decent number of listeners on JBO Radio I even emailed the company asking one of their reps, technicians or ANYONE to join me on the air and explain to us exactly how their product worked. No surprises, I got no response.

But yeah...junk. Spend your money on something worthwhile.







09:f9:11:02:9d:74:e3:5b:d8:41:56:c5:63

Re: Nology Power Core Coil Amplifier
Thursday, October 12, 2006 1:09 PM
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ JBO Radio? What's the range and station?



Re: Nology Power Core Coil Amplifier
Thursday, October 12, 2006 1:39 PM
I'll vouch that the wires are pure garbage. Just glad they come with a lifetime warrenty through summit racing, and I got MSD wires instead along with a refund check.





Re: Nology Power Core Coil Amplifier
Friday, October 13, 2006 8:34 PM
The nology does have the capacitive wires like you say but it doesn't hold the charge until the coil is finished firing. It does delay the spark a little as the nature of anything additional in the line of the spark, however a capacitor stores charge, but how much is the question. It only delays the spark for as long as it takes to charge the capacitor, which is dependant upon the RPM of the motor so whats really happening is as the motors rpms increase the spark retard gets larger since the charge time is a fixed constant. However even if the capacitor was 300 micro farads which is large for a wire loom capacitor, the delay would be in the range of hundredths of a second at a dead short which is basically how an ignition system works, repeated dead shorts followed by a collapsing magnetic field.

Yes, it is still a piece of crap bottom line.
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