That’s your right and you clearly have bought into the marketing that it’s easier to install. It is. But that convenience comes at a cost. And that cost is system reliability. You are trading an easy to install but mechanically complex unitized ignition product vs a harder to install, but more reliable distributed product. You made your choice. Live with it. But don’t dig up imaginary failure modes to justify your choice.
"Bought Into the marketing." - That is patronizing. Yes I bought two P-mags. Very happy. Not ignorant, naive or inexperience. I did my research. Light Speed, ElectroAIr, SDS and P-Mag. I waited over 10 yrs before I even would consider buying the P-Mag. P-Mag is #1 selling experimental electronic ignition on the market 20 years says something. I waited for SDS II to see what was up before buying the P-Mag/ I was impressed. I even inquired about ordering but Ross was busy and never got back. He had a backlog. I thought about Canada, getting parts. P-MAG? USA, service exceptional. (I believe Hartzell is still keeping manufacturing in USA).
"Easier to install" - Yes it is a fact. Facts are stubborn. Again wires running over your engine with pickups inside the pulley that have to be aligned, gapped that could if something fouls the spinner, ring gear could wipe out sensors. I did have a alternator belt fail on a Piper Twin... The generator seized and belt smoked and came off with force. If EI sensors were there they would likely be damaged, gone. I don't need cockpit displays on on the fly adjustment. I just want an ignition out of sight out of mind.
"Cost is system reliability." That is a strawman. What reliability issue with P-Mag? They are very reliable. This red herring distracts from the self power and ease of installation. I wrote a book on bearing wear above, please read it. That is a maintenance item I grant you. This is a known wear item and addressed with maintenance. Yes it is more than hall effect sensors of the pulley. Got it. Noted. Than you follow up with self power and ease of installation is not important?
Your argument and others is Self Power and Ease of installation are NOT important so the P-Mag has no advantages? That is Illogical. Yes there are other solutions, but the P-Mag is the only one that does what it does and does it well.
The value and advantage of P-Mags is prima facie, self evident. Again #1 selling experimental electronic ignition on the market 20 years. There is NO MARKETING, just good product, great customer service and word of mouth. They spent ZERO on marketing. Do you see Ads all over magazines and internet? No, not at least in the pre Hartzell years.
Light Speed with CDI (Capacitive Discharge Ignition) and manual timing adjustment in flight, great especially for racing, turbo engines (but could blow your engine if not careful). LS has clear advantages. It is not certified and you need a back up battery. It has been around one of the longest and has had some board failures. That is why we have TWO ignitions. (Almost all other EI's use good old , fashion,
Inductive Discharge Ignition (IDI), invented by Charles F. Kettering in 1910 and first used by DELCO on 1912 Cadillac. P-Mag, SDS, Electroair, Sure fly, Light Speed (lower priced model) all use IDI... like your car.
SDS with all kinds of cockpit displays and controls, auto backup power, very cool. That is a lot of wires, too much info and controls, overkill for me. Don't get me wrong I like overkill but ignition out of sight out of mind, just work please. I just want the engine to go SUCK, SQUEEZE BANG BLOW... especially the BANG. I don't want to think about my ignition or see it. Just turn it on and it works. Done.
Electro-Air has marketing they have the hottest of the hottest sparks ever. Well that may or may not be true but there is only so much energy you can use. It is certified and you need a back up battery. Otherwise I think it is a fine ignition, but there have been issues in the field but believe they are rare.
Sure Fly - certified unit that uses aircraft spark plugs (or you can convert to NGK if experimental but that is a customer modification I believe). You need a back up battery.
I WANT A MAGNETO. ON>RUN OFF> That is it. I want it to run with the master and E-bus switches OFF.
I don't want to see ala carte wires and sensors in the engine bay. I don't want Inst Panel display, or endless user adjusts flight or ground.
I just want it to work and give me ALL the Advantages of EI:
Easier Start
Smoother Idle
Hotter Spark (this is where the marketing fibs come in by other brands)*
Lower fuel Burn, better fuel economy at high altitude lower power, due to timing advance.
The P-Mag and frankly ALL the EI's do the same dang thing, just in different packages. Ease of installation, less wires, and self power rocks, P-Mags "marketing" advantage. I don't want to mess with settings, other than time it (LED light Caveman can do it) and fly it. Yes there are A B jumpers, even I can figure it out. It is VERY advanced and hose features are hidden. You can access it through a DATA port for engine data, diagnostics and even modification. Robust fault detection and fault LED has coded blinks to tell you what is going on.
* "P-Mag does not have a hot spark" - I heard that years ago, so I investigated. I know the coil pack used on P-Mag. I read the hype by an un-named experimental EI company, I even called and talked to them. Also talked to another EI company and P-Mag. My conclusion, irrelevant marketing. The P-Mag spark energy is more powerful than needed, enough to give a big fat spark across +0.035 at full power with margins X10. It's pointless complaint. If someone's coil (transformer) claim is they have bigger step up? OK. What you going to do with it? Use more ships electrical power? Yes and it's wasted.
EI is not Rocket Surgery or Brain engineering. P-Mag design uses clever design choices, conservative with safety in mind, and is a high quality product. That is NOT to say others are not high quality. So there you go.
May be you bought into the marketing and the propaganda. I waited to decade on EI. I looked seriously at every brand out there. The winner? What ever you decide. Even the Standard Magneto has a lot of merit for local flying, especially if you never fly at high altitude, long distance at 55% to 60% power. The EI can not be beat in this regime. So if you have two good Magnetos, stick with them. They work.