reavesga
Petty Officer 2nd Class
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2010
- Messages
- 165
I am running an electronic ignition conversion on my 1974 3.0L. I have a couple of projects going on right now. The drive is off and the billows are out. replacing the billows. While I was at it I decided to replace the lifters as well. I have had one talking to me for a couple of years. Since I had to open it up I decided to replace all of the lifters. Anyway, in the process of rotating the motor to adjust the valves I started to smell something getting hot. it turned out with the drive off, when I pulled the shifter back into the neutral position the cabled did not slide and triggered the shift interrupt switch. I turned the motor over and in the middle of adjusting the valves I smelled hot and started hearing some popping. I immediatly reached up and turned the key off and realized what I had done. With the key on power is going to the coil with the electronic conversion. however since the **** switch was triggered the coil was ground, so basically it was just part of a big heater circuit. The wires were really hot and the coil was pretty dang hot. I finished adjusting the valves. Put everything back together. made sure that shift switch was not tirggered and tried to fire her up. yes I connected a hose direct to the thermostat housing for cooling, since the drive is not installed. Anyway, motor turns over but no fire. Pulled the coil wire off at the distributor and just layed it there. no popping. I mean there is nothing. the motor does not even spit or cough or anything .there is no fire. And I am guessing the reason is no spark. So the question is, did i burn out the coil? I have never heard of a coil burning out, but the ignition circuit is pretty simple so either the coil is bad or the electronic trigger on the distributor is not doing its thing. not really sure how that works. it just has a cable that goes from the distributor to the coil.
Thoughts?
Thoughts?