Demonic
Well-Known Member
Put a meter on the battery while cranking. I had a weak battery do the same symptoms you have.
Timing is good. it fired up fine when I moved it from the garage and then wouldn’t restart. I did check TDC though. Since then I did the GM HEI conversion so it’s not a timing issue but could be a distributor issue. right now I need it generate spark at the coil before I worry about distribution….I have to ask the obvious question?
Is your timing set correctly? Did you set top dead center? Are you 180 degrees out?
Yes it goes to 0 then shows voltage and keeps doing that. I assume it's when the star wheel hits the pick up coil. Should it be steady voltage when cranking?"Intermittent?"
No. How were you measuring?I measured the distributor inductive coil output while cranking and was getting an intermittent reading (As it was spinning) of 1 to 2.5 volts which seems right?
One of us misunderstood. I took it he is referring to the distributor pickupNo. How were you measuring?
Really need a scope to measure that. 10 to 12 KV would be more typical under load or snap acceleration.
eg.
View attachment 1716148426
This is a test for maximum coil output possible done by disconnecting one spark plug wire
View attachment 1716148428
Switch your voltmeter to AC voltage.Yes it goes to 0 then shows voltage and keeps doing that. I assume it's when the star wheel hits the pick up coil. Should it be steady voltage when cranking?
Take the diagram shown here and replace the coil, with a FD478 coil…I have this exact setup wired the exact same way, although I tested it with a canister coil too. I have a new GM hei module coming tomorrow…let’s see if that changes anything.Back things up a bit. People are going on about Mopar and you are mentioning HEI. WHICH DO YOU HAVE AKA what are you trying to use?
And what have you done exactly? Seems like HEI?
View attachment 1716148657
You DID? break the "tit" off the bottom and mount it flat on something for a heat sink?Take the diagram shown here and replace the coil, with a FD478 coil…I have this exact setup wired the exact same way, although I tested it with a canister coil too. I have a new GM hei module coming tomorrow…let’s see if that changes anything.
I appreciate the advice. The GM HEI is mounted to an aluminum plate with the correct paste. I tried 3 coils (original mopar, MSD cansiter, and the new FD478. I think i can rule out a coil failure. I verified a full 12v and despite the full 12v wired a relay direct to the battery to make sure.You DID? break the "tit" off the bottom and mount it flat on something for a heat sink?
What did it do, AKA run for awhile and then quit? Do you have ANY coils lying around?
I would de-wire the power wire and hot wire it direct for testing. You should NOT be using a ballast.
CHECK WITH A METER to be sure you have full 12V to the module and the coil BOTH with key "in run" and with key "cranking"
Remove and "work" the distributor pickup connector in/ out several times to scrub the terminals and "feel" for tightness. Pay attention to the diagram polarity to establish what is called proper "rotor phasing." That will not prevent spark, but will offset the timing and cause issues.
I do not know anything about that particular coil. I will tell you that I ran an HEI module for two summers with the old canister stocker coil off my Dart, worked fine (no ballast)
Sounds like you are down to a trigger problem (distributor pickup or poor connections) or bad moduleI appreciate the advice. The GM HEI is mounted to an aluminum plate with the correct paste. I tried 3 coils (original mopar, MSD cansiter, and the new FD478. I think i can rule out a coil failure. I verified a full 12v and despite the full 12v wired a relay direct to the battery to make sure.
I did check the voltages. There are 2 wires coming from the key switch, one with 12v key on and one with 12v crank. They both are wired to the module and to the + of the coil. I'm thinking trigger problem as well.....Sounds like you are down to a trigger problem (distributor pickup or poor connections) or bad module
However DID YOU check the voltages as I outlined. This is IMPORTANT, AKA do you understand how the key/ IGN2/ bypass circuit works? You MUST check that you have power when cranking AND doing this while using the key rather than jumpering the start relay
The coil is not a Chevy coil. It's a Ford coil. Standard Ignition FD478. FD is Standard's prefix for FORD. Ford, Lincoln, Mercury and Mazda.
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