Ok, here's one for all you electrically inclined people. I want to do the wiring for my JLO aircraft engine, which I intend to put on an air boat or an air sled (iv almost completed the air sled) , but Iv got a few questions before I start splicing. 4 wires come out from the stator plate. 2 yellow, both of which should be hot, the black ground used to shut off the engine when grounded, and a blue one that runs up to the first coil which is then wired in series to the other coil so they both go off at the same time since it is a simultaneously firing opposed engine. Now, here come the questions. I have an old Teleflex marine tachometer that has the setting for the appropriate amount of poles/pulses for my engine which is 4 pole. There are three terminals on the gauge, one is ground, one is ignition, and the other is send. The ground obviously gets grounded, but the ignition requires a DC power source, and the send requires a AC power source. SO For the DC could I pass one of my powered yellow wires through a rectifier/regulator to turn the AC current into crude DC to power both my lights AND supply the required DC power for the ignition terminal on the tachometer? Or would I have to use a battery to provide a more steady current for the ignition terminal and use the DC from the regulator/rectifier to power my lights? Secondly, what wire should I attach the "send" terminal on my tachometer to? Could I hook it to the other yellow wire without any kind of regulator to provide the AC input and get a reading of my RPM? Or should I split the blue wire going to the coil and hook that to the terminal? I look forward to your responses.