CDI works on the principle of charging a capacitor to a much higher voltage, say 400v, then this capacitor dumps its charge into the primary side of the coil which produces a much hotter, albeit much shorter, spark on the secondary.
Some purported downsides to CDI are:
1) Because the spark is a much shorter duration, there is not a complete burn of the mixture.
2) Possibly because of 1) above, some CDI systems are not known for their smooth idle. Some designs get around this by producing a "multi-spark" discharge at idle.
3) Not all coils are suitable for CDI. Any coil with an integral ignitor cannot be used with CDI.
4) Because a CDI system discharges all of its energy in typically 1/3 the time of an inductive system, it tends to find the weak spots in an ignition system faster.
5) Cost. To do a CDI system right requires at least another box or two in the system. These boxes cost anywhere between $1K and $2K.
Downsides of an inductive ignition:
1) For a single coil, distributor based system, there is not sufficient "dwell" time at high RPM to charge the coil(s) to produce a hot spark. (This disadvantage is reduced or eliminated by using COP's or CNP's)
2) Multi-coil waste spark setups can have the same problem as 1) but this can be reduced by boosting the charging voltage on the primary side of the coils. For example at 12v the Mototron coil requires about 1.6 msec to charge sufficiently to produce a 50 millijoule spark, however if the charging voltage is boosted to 16v, it only requires 1.1 msec for the same spark energy.
It would seem the ideal ignition would use inductive technology at low RPM and CD at high RPM. Interestingly HKS sell a module called the Twin Power DLI which does just this, and it is a commonly used solution on Supra's which have had their ignitions reconfigured to waste spark setups.
Some purported downsides to CDI are:
1) Because the spark is a much shorter duration, there is not a complete burn of the mixture.
2) Possibly because of 1) above, some CDI systems are not known for their smooth idle. Some designs get around this by producing a "multi-spark" discharge at idle.
3) Not all coils are suitable for CDI. Any coil with an integral ignitor cannot be used with CDI.
4) Because a CDI system discharges all of its energy in typically 1/3 the time of an inductive system, it tends to find the weak spots in an ignition system faster.
5) Cost. To do a CDI system right requires at least another box or two in the system. These boxes cost anywhere between $1K and $2K.
Downsides of an inductive ignition:
1) For a single coil, distributor based system, there is not sufficient "dwell" time at high RPM to charge the coil(s) to produce a hot spark. (This disadvantage is reduced or eliminated by using COP's or CNP's)
2) Multi-coil waste spark setups can have the same problem as 1) but this can be reduced by boosting the charging voltage on the primary side of the coils. For example at 12v the Mototron coil requires about 1.6 msec to charge sufficiently to produce a 50 millijoule spark, however if the charging voltage is boosted to 16v, it only requires 1.1 msec for the same spark energy.
It would seem the ideal ignition would use inductive technology at low RPM and CD at high RPM. Interestingly HKS sell a module called the Twin Power DLI which does just this, and it is a commonly used solution on Supra's which have had their ignitions reconfigured to waste spark setups.