by sonex1374 » Thu Sep 10, 2020 9:53 pm
Chris,
The wire attached to the kill terminal on the mags acts like an antenna and throws a lot of RFI static into your comm radio and instruments. Shielding intercepts this RFI radiation and keeps it out of your electronics.
There is a high-voltage pulse created by the mag that either passes thru the kill wire (if possible) or jumps the spark plug gap and fires the plug. The mag kill wire is constantly attempting to conduct that pulse to ground. When the mag is "dead" or inactivated that wire is connected to ground and the pulse is also sent to ground. However, when the kill switch is open (e.g. not connected to ground) this wire becomes a very efficient radiator of this energy into the radio frequency band and throws lots of static.
The mag itself couldn't care less about shielding this wire, so long as there's a switch and path to ground it's happy. What many people do is to use the shield as the return path for the mag kill wire. This way the shield does double-duty - it acts as an RFI-blocker while the mag is hot, and as a ground return path when the mag is cold. There's nothing preventing you from using a kill wire and separate shielding, but then you need two runs of shielded cable instead of a single run (the first run goes from the mag to the switch, the second from the switch to the ground). Using a single shielded wire, the first part of the path is the center wire from the mag to the switch, and the second part is from the switch back to the mag and a nearby grounding point.
Jeff