Harmonic Balancer Interrupter Ring
Dual Crank Sensor Operation:
Harmonic Balancer W/Interrupter Rings:
Crankshaft Sensor Positioning:
PURPOSE
The Ignition Control module interprets the 18X and 3X pulse signals as an indication of crankshaft position, and must have both signals to fire the correct ignition coil. Two sets of interrupter rings mounted on the harmonic balancer either block or allow the magnetic field to activate the dual hall-effect switch.
OPERATION
The dual crank sensor contains two Hall-effect switches with one shared magnet mounted between them. The magnet and each Hall-Effect switch are separated by an air gap. The Hall-Effect switch reacts like a solid-state switch, grounding a low current signal voltage when a magnetic field is present. When the magnetic field is shielded from the switch by a piece of steel placed in the air gap between the switch and the magnet, the signal voltage is not grounded. If the piece of steel is repeatedly moved in and out of the air gap, the signal voltage will appear to cycle. The piece of steel is two concentric interrupt rings mounted to the rear of the crankshaft balancer.
Each interrupter ring has blades and windows that, with crankshaft rotation, either block the magnetic field or let it pass to one of the Hall-effect switches. The outer Hall-Effect switch is called the 18X crank sensor because this outer interrupt ring has 18 evenly spaced blades and windows which are all the same width. The 18X crank sensor produces 18 "ON-OFF" pulses per crankshaft revolution. The Hall-effect switch closest to the crankshaft is called the 3X crank sensor because it has 3 different unevenly spaced and different width size windows. The 3X crank sensor produces 3 different length "ON-OFF" pulses per crankshaft revolution. When a 3X interrupter ring is between the magnet and the inner switch, the magnetic field will cause the 3X Hall switch to ground the 3X signal voltage supplied from the C3I module.
The 18X interrupt ring and Hall-effect switch react similarly.
LOCATION
The interrupter rings are part of the harmonic balancer.