MAGNECOR
The following has been prepared by the staff
at Magnecor and is purely Magnecor's perspective
of the market in the USA for its specialized ignition
wires. We hope the following will also provide
readers with a general overview of the USA performance
parts aftermarket for ignition wires, and answer
some of the questions we are continually asked
by consumers, installers and re-sellers each and
every working day (also see our FAQ page).
This Technical Information Web Site contains
material which no doubt appears to be overly critical
of some Magnecor's competitors, and the claims
they make for their ignition wires. We at Magnecor
hope consumers (and our competitors) will understand
that if our competitors did not make claims which,
at best, are exaggerations of fact and, at worst,
are designed to cash-in on the naiveté
of a surprising number of consumers, magazine
editors and automobile service industry members
(who should know better), there would be no reason
for us to devote such an abnormal amount of time
each and every day to answering these questions.
We should also add, as a result of the amount
of time we have devoted to discussing subjects
which include:
"Are your wires the same as .......... (brand)
low-resistance wires I bought from a speed shop?"
"How do your wires compare with Nology?"
"What horsepower gain can I expect if I fit
your wires?"
we are in a position to pass on information we
have received from disappointed and disillusioned
users of our competitors' products for which dubious
and ridiculous claims are continually published.
We are also avid collectors of both working and
failed ignition wires we use for testing and analyzing
as to why our competitors' wires rarely fulfill
claims published in their advertisements and promotional
material. Of course, the gathering of all this
information and material helps us develop superior
products which perform properly and offer a long
service life.
The aftermarket automotive and motorcycle ignition
components industry has always been renowned for
the abnormal number of marketers making non-factual,
or gimmicky, or just plain absurd claims for the
products they sell. During the last 40 years,
it's amazing just how many marketers of "capacitor"
wires and wires incorporating an assortment of
magic boxes (for which claims of more horsepower
and fuel economy are made) keep finding so many
unwary consumers during the time they remain in
business.
Lately, long established companies marketing
reliable, efficient and powerful ignition systems
have also become surprisingly reckless with claims
for the generic ignition wires they include in
their product line. For whatever reason, most
ignition system marketers in the USA are obsessed
with the notion that a "low-resistance"
ignition wire line (with the marketer's name printed
onto low-grade generic ignition cable) needs to
be included as part of any ignition "package"
sold through mass-merchandisers and speed shop
outlets. Production vehicle manufacturers have
also joined the frenzy.
Because of the fierce competition amongst aftermarket
ignition system marketers selling branded generic
"low-resistance" ignition wire lines
through mass-merchandisers and speed shops, every
marketer needs to find a reason (factual or otherwise)
why their ignition wires are better than similar
(and sometimes identical) wires offered by their
competitors. Unfortunately for owners of late
model vehicles (or earlier vehicles fitted with
high-tech aftermarket electronic components),
improved quality and adequate suppression is never
a reason to be better, as no marketer sees justification
in improving their ignition wire line without
either exposing themselves to a financial loss,
or jeopardizing their relationship with mass-merchandisers
and some speed shops — because to do so
(and remain profitable) the wholesale price of
their ignition wires would rise substantially
above those offered by their competitors.
The quality and performance of aftermarket ignition
wires (including wires sold as replacement parts
sold through dealerships) in the USA is, to a
large extent, driven by mass-merchandisers and
some speed shops who insist on buying the lowest
price (which usually means cheaply-constructed)
products which are also heavily promoted. No doubt
they reason if the product is cheap enough, and
if it's pre-sold by the marketer's promotion,
additional profits will be made by eliminating
the need to employ and train the sales staff that
consumers expect to be available to assist and
advise them. The issue of quality appears to be
of little consequence.
The reason ignition wires with "low-resistance"
spiral conductors proliferate the performance
aftermarket is that these wires are cheap to manufacture
and are easy to sell because "low-resistance"
conductors are falsely promoted by marketers as
being able to produce more powerful sparks. A
classic example is a Ford Motorsport wire set
(consisting of cheaply-made generic "low-resistance"
wires marked "Ford Motorsport") for
a V8 Mustang selling for as low as $42 at speed
shops, while Ford's original equipment Motorcraft
carbon conductor wire set for the same Mustang
sells for $84 at a Ford dealership!
This situation makes one suspect that either
the original limited-life Motorcraft carbon conductor
wire set is grossly overpriced, or that the Ford
Motorsport "low-resistance" conductor
wire set is very cheaply constructed. Unfortunately
for US consumers, either suspicion is correct
— few, if any production vehicle owners
in the USA would disagree that genuine spare parts
are anything other than overpriced — and
Ford Motorsport wire sets, like all other brands
of generic "low-resistance" conductor
wires currently proliferating the performance
aftermarket, are cheaply constructed to compete
with other similar or identical wire sets offered
by other marketers.
Our competitors' policy of selling cheap "low-resistance"
conductor wires in the performance aftermarket
is by no means unrealistic, as hundreds of millions
of engines are still out there which are not electronically
managed as well as older vehicles with none of
the electronic on-board equipment effected by
EMI that Magnecor Race Wires are designed to suppress.
Heat problems suffered by wires with insulating
jackets vastly inferior to the jackets used on
Magnecor Race Wires can generally be overcome
by fitting additional sleeves (which can cost
as much, if not more, than the wire set itself)
over the spark plug wires. For 22 years, Magnecor
has also marketed (for non-electronically managed
engines) an improved version of the "low-resistance"
wires our competitors currently market.
It has become a very profitable ritual at a
huge number of service shops to replace endless
numbers of expensive electronic components on
recent model vehicles to solve all sorts of engine
running problems simply solved (usually as the
last resort) by using ignition wires that properly
suppress EMI.
In recent years, performance market ignition
wire "improvements" by our competitors
have amounted mostly to nothing other than copying
Magnecor Race Wires' innovations of larger cable
sizes and color (particularly in the USA and Australia),
at the same time cutting manufacturing costs by
using inferior materials and conductors. The need
for EMI suppression by late model vehicles is
simply addressed by our competitors by including
words in advertisements and promotional material
which suggest there is EMI suppression. Unfortunately,
the claims that "low-resistance," "super
conductor" and "built-in capacitor"
wires are EMI suppressed are as factual as other
claims made for the same wires such as: "300
times more powerful spark" — "30
times more spark energy" — "15
times more powerful" — "over 300%
more spark energy" etc. etc. etc.
"EMI SUPPRESSION" CLAIMS BY OUR COMPETITORS
Unfortunately, the term "EMI suppression,"
which was first introduced by Magnecor in 1989
to describe a major function of our KV85 and R-100
Race Wires which, at that time, had been re-engineered
to overcome emerging EMI problems caused by the
use of aftermarket "low-resistance"
wires on electronically managed engines and vehicles
that contain sensitive on-board electronic equipment,
has now become a meaningless buzzword to include
with other claims (few, if any of which are factual)
our competitors make for their ignition wires
in advertisements and other promotional material.
Admittedly, Magnecor has benefited from the
heavy promotion and ridiculous claims made for
ignition wires by our competitors in the aftermarket
industry, and Magnecor Race Wires (products which
until a few years ago were sold almost exclusively
to racers all over the world) have become extremely
popular with production vehicle owners who use
their vehicles exclusively on the street —
mainly because those owners have been made aware
by our competitors that good ignition wires are
important to a vehicle's performance — albeit
for the wrong reasons!
However, despite what you see in promotional
material, consumers should be aware that ignition
wires are only conductors, and by themselves can't
generate or "install" additional engine
horsepower. Like good tires (tyres) on a road
vehicle, which are needed to ensure that full
engine power is transferred to the road surface
without adversely effecting the vehicle's handling
— good ignition wires are needed to conduct
full ignition coil energy to the spark plugs without
interfering with a vehicle's electronic engine
management system. If either the vehicle's tires
or ignition wires are poorly designed and/or deteriorated
— the potential overall performance of the
vehicle is no longer available to the driver.
MAGNECOR'S APPROACH TO THE IGNITION WIRE MARKET
Magnecor does not delude itself that the cost
of manufacturing our Race Wires will always be
far in excess of what most performance aftermarket
resellers want to pay. Nor do we have any intention
to compromise either the performance or the quality
of our products to pander to resellers who base
their decisions as to which parts to stock on
the premise that consumers only want cheap and/or
heavily promoted products. For this reason Magnecor
products are only available from retailers who
stock and sell quality merchandise and who are
more concerned about their customers needs than
they are about making additional profits from
heavily promoted inferior merchandise onto which
extra margins can be loaded.
Magnecor products are also popular with technicians
who take pride in providing their customers with
the best possible workmanship and spare parts
that will benefit their customers most. Many repair
shops do not fit Magnecor Race Wires to their
customers' street vehicles because it is unlikely
customers will ever need to replace the wires
while they own their vehicles — although
a huge number of the same repair shop owners and
employees will happily buy Magnecor wires for
their own vehicles.
Although Magnecor Race Wires have always been
primarily designed and manufactured for use on
modern competition engines which require wires
with high-capacity EMI suppressed conductors (which
will not deteriorate with use or interfere with
on-board electronic equipment, including engine
management systems) and heat-resistant insulating
jackets which are far super/or to all other ignition
wires currently proliferating the performance
aftermarket, Magnecor Race Wires can be used on
exhaust emission controlled street vehicles to
improve and maintain ignition performance, even
if a high-output ignition system is not fitted.
Also, Magnecor Race Wires are available for
almost every engine ever made. Unless the customer
requests a universal (unfinished) wire set, all
Magnecor Race Wire sets or individual wires are
supplied ready-to-install to eliminate the problems
and inconvenience associated with stripping, terminating
and booting the unfinished wire sets which most
mass-merchandisers and speed shops prefer to stock.
|