Ok, again.... How do the dang wires work?
A capacitor can be configured so it stores energy until there is a drop in supply voltage, at which point it will discharge the voltage at once.
What I think they are claiming is that when your ignition fires it will charge up the capacitor will the entire voltage of your ignition box. Once the engine is done "firing" the voltage will drop and the capacitor will discharge the entire "charge" at once, theoretically faster then the ignition system can giving you a very fast single spark. I assume this is why you need to advance your timing, to make up for the slight delay added by the capacitors.
This is just what I'm remembering from Electronics all those years ago, so I may be a bit off.
OK I have that part figured out. The part I want to know is how the capacitor part of those wires gain their charge. I see on the web site that the wires have a grounding point but no charging point.
How do the cap's get charged?
And another point, you have to charge a cap prior to use. How do you charge it before the spark plug fires? It has to get it's energy from some place, where is that some place?
And another thing, from the drawings I looked at there are no connections to the plug wire from the cap. It is insulated, and most people know that electricity will not flow when it is insulated from any contact. The wires are grounded but that don't mean squat when they have no way of being charged in the first place.
Here is you chance to shine sidekicksrock, sell me on these wires.