abby70
New Member
need info on how they work and how it has its effects on the electronics
can also try removing the air cleaner and cover the top of the carb. if it idles better it's getting air somewhere.A bad rough idle, sounds like a vacuum leak if it will start by pumping the throttle and when you remove your foot or pop it in gear it dies, is this what you are saying ?
When it is in neutral can you hold it at 2.200 rpm does it smooth out ?
Yep :thumrigh: That's the way to do that check :smile:can also try removing the air cleaner and cover the top of the carb. if it idles better it's getting air somewhere.
voltage regulator?? its still kinda new, could it possbily still be that??
Nope.
Let's start with what exactly you have for an ignition system, for a cam, and intake/ carb, and where you think the timing is set.
And this helped the original poster? To hear your theory?You guys are dancing around the answer in a backwards sort of way. ALL US, anyways, manufacturers used a ballast type setup. GM and maybe Ford typically used an "in harness" wire resistor, as opposed to the Chrysler ceramic resistor
THEY COULD HAVE designed a 12V coil that would operate directly off 12 (actually 14) and been done with it.
THE REASON 12V cars were designed in this manner is SO THAT you can have a hot spark for starting!!! The ballast is bypassed during start, so that you normally get pretty much the same hot spark during cranking as you do during running.
Ford and GM both do this by an extra set of contacts in the starter solenoid, Mopar did it with an extra set of contacts in the ignition switch, the infamous "brown" "ign2" circuit.
So I'll say it once more. THEY COULD HAVE just designed a coil to operate directly off the battery. Some tractors (12V) do this very thing.
On an aside, ballasts are NOT exclusive to 12V vehicles. We once had a 6V Ford flathead 6 in what had been a grader, and my Dad built a homemade tractor out of it. I still remember the little ballast hooked right on the 6V coil, with a little ventilated tin cover. This would have been a late 40's or 50's engine.
Here's one listed as OEM for '30's Fords. The resistor itself on this part looks exactly as I remember it all those years ago
Need more info;what ignition. Does it do it when hot and cold? Can you wiggle the switch and it stays running?