When you say â??digitalâ??. Do you really mean microprocessor-controlled or
just generally â??solid-stateâ??
I certainly agree that four failures in a row suggests something is funky with
your power, and you may have high voltage spikes coming from somewhere that is
damaging the electronics in the regulator.
True digital, microprocessor-controlled, is very very sensitive to voltage
spikes.
Analog solid-state regulators are substantially more durable, but they still
need really good spike protection with some BIG fat components to handle the
spike power.
When I had a really bad sparkplug wire (or several) it must have been making
some seriously high voltage spikes which took out the old original voltage
stabilizer and in old original coil.
-Tony
>
> On Jun 27, 2020, at 2:04 PM, triumphs-request@autox.team.net wrote:
>
> Message: 13
> Date: Sat, 27 Jun 2020 09:17:38 -0500
> From: "dave" <dave@ranteer.com>
> To: "'Triumphs List'" <triumphs@autox.team.net>
> Subject: Re: [TR] Perplexing A-Type OD Problem
> Message-ID: <000901d64c8d$b72fc830$258f5890$@ranteer.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
>
> That would suggest to me that you have a power issue.
>
>
>
> From: andrew uprichard <auprichard@uprichard.net>
> Sent: Saturday, June 27, 2020 8:39 AM
> To: 'dave' <dave@ranteer.com>; 'Triumphs List' <triumphs@autox.team.net>
> Subject: RE: [TR] Perplexing A-Type OD Problem
>
>
>
> They were all digital.
>
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