mattcfish wrote:StephenB wrote:Dual Plugging
Just for the sake of it:
Performance limits of the OMEGA W: 12V and 1.8Ohm primary resistance or higher (I wouldn't go as low as 1.8Ohm in such a risky application, think 3Ohm ... but even then!)
Two 6V coils connected in series: R1 + R2, each coil requires 6V supply, so you need to apply 12V (may work if R1+R2 larger than 3Ohm)
Two equal 12V coils connected in parallel: 1/2 R (may work if R larger than 3Ohm but Back EMF might kill the amplifier before you know it)
Don't mix and match, "path of least resistance" applies it can create all sorts of performance issues.
.
Stephen,
I'm using the Omega type W dual plug amplifier (I wish I had ordered the V as I no longer use points as a back up), so, according to the literature my dual output 2.2 ohm grey coils should be good if wired as directed, right? That's a total of 4.4 ohms. That's what the amplifier is designed to handle.
If I had a set of 1.5ohm Dyna Brown coils that would equal a total of 3 ohms. Wouldn't that be ideal? If not, what is the ideal coil configuration for an Omega type W dual plug ignition?
Is there a problem with Omega dual plug amplifiers burning out, even when wired properly?

All of the Dyna dual coils are rated as 12V coils. My understanding is that that's 6V per outlet. So two 12V dual outlet coils is like having four 6V single coils.