What year? The early ones were a dual-ballast resistor, which has 4 connectors on it. The one resistor supplied the ECU with power, and the other was a step-down for the coil. The dual item has orienting notches cuz the ecu side is different from the coil side. It only codes right when the matching connectors are used.
Start with a fully charged battery. And a cold ballast resister.Put an analog voltmeter on the coil plus, and turn the key to run; the voltage should be within 1/2 volt of the battery.Now turn the key to crank. You should see the needle momentarily drop to zero, and then bounce back up to near battery voltage dropping with the cranking time.
>If it does this there is nothing wrong with the circuit all the way from the battery,to the start-relay, through the bulkhead connector,through the ammeter,the key switch,the #1 splice,back through the bulkhead again, thru the ballast and finally the coil, AND back to the battery thru the engine block.
But if it drops to zero and never comes back, then you simply move up the line to each connection point I listed, until you find the voltage. If you put the tranny in gear (automatics only), the starter won't crank.And if the starter won't crank, the Ecu doesn't fire either, cuz it needs signal from the magnetic pick-up/ reluctor.
If the voltage pops back up to some voltage in excess of 1 volts less than the battery(starter not cranking), then there is a high resistance connection somewhere between the coil and the battery, go look for it, same as before.
Happy hunting.