Cherrybomber13 wrote:
I don't know if this helps the conversation but this is our r-2800 on the Sikorsky Memorial FG1-D Built at the end of the war (July 45)
FG1-D Corsair Pratt & Whitney R-2800 by
Cherry Bomb Photography, on Flickr
That is the cast harness.
Harnesses are particular to the type of Mag used and other considerations, such as altitude used for normal operations.
As you go higher the air thins. This affects how the spark travels in the harness and can cause the spark to be able to jump to a ground at high altitudes that it wouldn't do at lower altitudes.
To compensate for this the harness could be filled with an oily gel substance. I believe this was an early attempt to improve on this situation.
Later they used an air pump rotor built into the distributors to pressurize the harness and parts to increase the air density in the ignition system.
This is all info I remember from long ago so I don't remember specifics but can be the reason why different ignition harnesses are out there that don't correlate to the parts books.
On the FG-1D (under restoration for Paul Allen now) I worked on I remember the distributors having the rotor vanes on them.
This was on the Bendix Mag systems on the B series R-2800. The Mag was in the center top location of the nosecase and looks like a small box.
The 2 distributors are located about 10 and 2 o'clock and are round castings maybe 8" in dia and height.
GE magnetos are different as each unit (1 at each 10 and 2 location) are self contained mag and distributor in 1 larger housing that looks more like a flying saucer. These were on A-26s and were lower altitude units so I don't believe they had an air pump and the harness was tubular.