If I can help via the phone shoot me a PMThanks for all of the input. I do not have 10.5 to the coil when cranking. Going to dig in more this weekend and will report back.
If I can help via the phone shoot me a PMThanks for all of the input. I do not have 10.5 to the coil when cranking. Going to dig in more this weekend and will report back.
You need to compare that to the supply voltage while cranking.Thanks for all of the input. I do not have 10.5 to the coil when cranking. Going to dig in more this weekend and will report back.
If it around 10.5 V at the battery it would show the problem is not in the wiring.You need to compare that to the supply voltage while cranking.
Thanks I may take you up on that this weekend. I only had 20 minutes but completely unplugged the “key on” blue wire and the blue with brown wire from the ballast. This got me 11v at the coil under crank. So the ballast is causing about 2v drop even on the “start” circuit. But I have no negative under cranking between + and - on coil. I have a dedicated neg between the brand new ECU housing and battery for troubleshooting. Could it be something with the pickup in the distributor not closing negative side of the coil? I’ll keep digging.If I can help via the phone shoot me a PM
I gotcha. Plugged everything back and I have 1.2v coil - to ground. I will try the 12v to coil tomorrow. ThanksI don't know what you mean by negative. Please stop trying to troubleshoot by unplugging stuff. This changes the circuit and may introduce unwanted situations.
With the key in "run" the coil NEG should be very low to ground, perhaps 1/2--2V and no higher. This shows that the coil is drawing current at rest, with key "on."
TRY THIS and I'm surprised no one has said so. "Rig" an alligator clip wire between a battery source, such as the "big stud" on the start relay, direct to coil + and then try to start with the key. When/ if it fires and runs, pull that loose and see if it continuses to r
Should I pull the blue wire from the + coil before putting the constant 12v to it? Won’t it back feed the circuit if I don’t?I don't know what you mean by negative. Please stop trying to troubleshoot by unplugging stuff. This changes the circuit and may introduce unwanted situations.
With the key in "run" the coil NEG should be very low to ground, perhaps 1/2--2V and no higher. This shows that the coil is drawing current at rest, with key "on."
TRY THIS and I'm surprised no one has said so. "Rig" an alligator clip wire between a battery source, such as the "big stud" on the start relay, direct to coil + and then try to start with the key. When/ if it fires and runs, pull that loose and see if it continuses to run.
Did it shut off by itself?Landed a positive wire to + of coil straight to battery +. Car cranked and ran for 20 seconds, I removed the wire and car immediately shut off. Can’t get it to start now and not showing spark on my spark tester.
Sadly, probably just going to hire a mobile mechanic to come to the house to fix it. I’ve had about enough of this.
hard to tell, wife said she pulled the key for some reason before I pulled the wire. Now it won’t start again.Did it shut off by itself?
Even with the hot wire on it?hard to tell, wife said she pulled the key for some reason before I pulled the wire. Now it won’t start again.
With the hot wire on it was running. Engine shut off the second I pulled it.Even with the hot wire on it?
Ok so it's not getting a signal on the run circuit. Shouldn't be difficult to figure out. You gotta test light?With the hot wire on it was running. Engine shut off the second I pulled it.
I do yesOk so it's not getting a signal on the run circuit. Shouldn't be difficult to figure out. You gotta test light?
Coils can be a ***** to diagnose. I normally just try another one.Found my BATTERY red at key ignition switch almost all the way broken, 3 other wires on the fuse block almost broken, both connections loose on my anmeter. Re crimped and tightened all. I can get a steady 12.1V throughout the ignition circuit in both IGN 1 and IGN 2 EXCEPT once I land the negative from the ECU to the - on coil I drop to 10.1V. This is the same trying 2 different well grounded ECUs and 2 different coils.
Tried disconnecting the tach to see if that was it and drops to 10.1 with or without tach connected. Did same with coil tower wire to distributor, same result.
I worried about the coils after I put a straight 12v to them from battery during troubleshooting.
Does that sound like a bad coil issue to you guys?
I’ll grab another one tomorrowCoils can be a ***** to diagnose. I normally just try another one.
I still think this is what we talked about, check the drop, with everything connected, through the bulkhead terminal, and across the ignition switch. Check with key in "run" with one meter probe on the ignition switch power infeed terminal and the other on the "run" ign1 terminal. Then make the same test with your probes at those two terminals, back probing the two terminals for the wiring.Found my BATTERY red at key ignition switch almost all the way broken, 3 other wires on the fuse block almost broken, both connections loose on my anmeter. Re crimped and tightened all. I can get a steady 12.1V throughout the ignition circuit in both IGN 1 and IGN 2 EXCEPT once I land the negative from the ECU to the - on coil I drop to 10.1V. This is the same trying 2 different well grounded ECUs and 2 different coils.
Tried disconnecting the tach to see if that was it and drops to 10.1 with or without tach connected. Did same with coil tower wire to distributor, same result.
I worried about the coils after I put a straight 12v to them from battery during troubleshooting.
Does that sound like a bad coil issue to you guys?
Thank you for the advice. Easiest way right now is just buying a MSD coil at Advanced Auto tomorrow morning and giving it a shot, I will definitely check compatibility with my ballast. I did use the process we spoke about and felt like I flew through troubleshooting today to find the negative on coil issue. Hoping I have a running car tomorrow.I still think this is what we talked about, check the drop, with everything connected, through the bulkhead terminal, and across the ignition switch. Check with key in "run" with one meter probe on the ignition switch power infeed terminal and the other on the "run" ign1 terminal. Then make the same test with your probes at those two terminals, back probing the two terminals for the wiring.
Also at this point, you should be able to jumper power to the coil, still with everything connected, crank the engine and get spark. Alternatively, you should be able to jumper power into the junction at the key feed to the ballast, everything connected normally, and the thing should get spark.
If not, start over on the ign system trouble and yeh, I would suspect the coil.
Make sure the coil(s) you have have got matched coil/ ballast, and again, as we talked, don't leave the system powered for minutes on end
Screw that. I'd get the cheapest POS they have that works with a ballast reaistor.......IF you are running one.Thank you for the advice. Easiest way right now is just buying a MSD coil at Advanced Auto tomorrow morning and giving it a shot, I will definitely check compatibility with my ballast. I did use the process we spoke about and felt like I flew through troubleshooting today to find the negative on coil issue. Hoping I have a running car tomorrow.
Got a new ECU, still won’t turn over.