The point I was making was mainly about the shape of the waveform. An optical sensor gives a reasonably nice square edge, but the variable reluctance gives a distorted sinewave, with an amplitude that varies with frequency - it just makes the job that much more difficult to determine when to fire.so from that I get that you don't see reluctance sensors as reliable. What about all of the other places in a car that use them? Like VSS, anti lock brakes, cam and crank sensors? And like I said to the TS HEI modules can be used with points for ignitions that don't have a large enough distributor body.
As for reliability - the only fault my car has developed in is 7 years managed to light up every yellow light on the dashboard - ABS, all-surface-progress-control, autonomous-emergency-braking, stability control and some more that I can't remember. The cause - failed wheel rotation sensor






