Thanks for the info quickt. The Tec sw, totally agree. For user's sake, hope they get that improved sometime.
Wanting to understand this better, and just some of my thoughts here. To make sparks, aftermarket ecu's do not need 360 or 720 deg sync. They just spark xx deg after a reference pulse comes in basically. And since the stang had a distribuor, neither the ecu nor an MSD box would need any kind of sync for spark. not sure aboutthe "digital" box that was on the car though. Again, it should just spark after each reference pulse and not need 360 or 720 deg sync. Assuming a delayed spark setup (leading reference angle)
That said, I have seen (with a scope) that the MSD sync pulses (analog VR pulses) from their distributor are very strong (high amplitude). Probably too strong IMO. Have not pursued that further, but was struck by how strong it was even at low speed (looking at a supercharged SBC truck at the time). An input circuit might have trouble with that signal level IMO.
And, MSD tends tohave less than stellar reliability, from what I've seen and heard. Maybe there was just a problem with that particular MSD setup? Is that possible here? Seems so, based on what you'd explained above.
Ok with your heads up information in hand, will be paying alot of attention to that now. Again, thanks. Planning some bench testing now. Will report back if/when we make any headway when work allows.
TurboTR
Edit- Sorry, forgot the forest for the trees here (lol). One big possibility that could explain the above issue is- reversed polarity from the VR sensor. I think this is not unusual to be honest. And it causes unstable reference pusles (and spark), like you describe above.
The Megasquirt page has a decent explanation of how a VR inupt works. For it to work reliably, it has to be correct polarity. A picture of the VR signal here is required to understand the following discusion; the green trace here makes a good example of one.
The quick reason is this: Assume a positive going pulse, followed by a fast high/low transition (the zero cross) on the middle of the sensor lug passing to a negative going pulse. The input circuit "arms" on the initial positive going portion (kindof where the arrow is pointing on the green trace in the picture), then "triggers" on the rapid (sharp) high/low transition that follows. The sharpness of tha transition is the key here to a stable puklse detection.
If you reverse the leads, then the input circuit doesn't "arm" until the low/high (now, because it's reversed) transition occurs. This is the edge that we're trying to detect, but we missied it. Now the circuit "triggers" instead on the slowly descending edge that follows, as the following positive going pulse decays away. Not good, not a stable, reliable trigger.
Is another possibility here at least, I'd say.