Twenty four nine volts attached to spark plug
Generate a small spark with an extra wire, and the electricity arcs through the ionized air, ionizing more air.
DemoBoard:side by side compare@8000rpm
illustrate that the spark from the distributor will fade soon after the ignition system is HOT enough, while the coil-on-plug won't fade that ...
My Z driving
pump. That is what is causing the hesitation and stumbling. The backfire is still a mystery. I think I have a bad spark plug wire or something in ...
1983 Ford 300 6 cylinder valve spring video
was caused, when my uncle put the ignition wires on backwards (he's use to his Chevy six cylinder which has more of a strait timing compared ...
The 3 Prime Directives of the Human Species
In the 70s, CB (citizens’ band) radio became a nationwide craze in the U.S. For a while, every dad who was handy around the house and loved to be in his car found a CB radio under the family Christmas tree. Using your CB radio, you could actually communicate with other folks on the road. Not just a craze, it was more a revolution. CBers could take on a new, fun persona—express a freer self, and communicate with other, fun freer selves on the roadways. A new camaraderie was born—loyalty and warm, friendly feelings among comrades. It was like today, on the internet. We get to “talk” to people around the world, expressing a freer self, and finding others like us. It was fun then, and it’s fun today.
For years, truck drivers had been using CB to communicate with each other on the open road. They developed a language all their own. We got introduced to their language watching Smokey and the Bandit “Breaker 1-9, this here’s the Rubber Duck…â€
Pretty soon, everybody was using the lingo, like “smoky the bear, put the hammer down, breaker 1-9, 10-4 good buddy.” The one word that always stuck with me was “rubberneckin.” That’s right, rubberneckin.
Rubberneckin, according to pioneer CBers—the over-the-road truckers—happened when there was an accident on the freeway. Everybody slowed down and craned their heads around as they passed the scene, to see what happened. They were rubberneckin.
Now, you’re wondering, “What in the hell has rubberneckin got to do with the 3 Prime Directives of the Human Species?” Well, it doesn’t have to do with ALL of them—just the first one. Patience, please.
First, what’s in it for you if you read on?In this first article of Project Butterfly Code, my commitment is nothing short of forever changing the way you think about why you are here on this earth—FOREVER. Now, most of us think we have little real clue why we are here. Our best guesses, though, are pretty good ones: “to be happy, to enjoy life, to make some difference (even if we don’t know what that difference could be), to honor family, to help others, to get what I can out of it, to experience what life has to offer.”
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