Hi
I was a bit concerned for a while about my electronic ignition too because I imported it from the states and didnt want to kill it. Since then I worked a few things out and i'm reasonably happy about it now.
Anyhow what I belive to be correct is you need a coil that matches the voltage of your ignition unit and your V8, (I have a Rangie). If you can find documentation for your ignition unit it should tell you what voltage range it's happy to run at. I was lucky to find out mine runs 9-18v.
The coil is the thing that confused the hell out of me.
My V8, (while running) should run at 9v. An un-unballasted coil (mine is un-ballasted) usually runs at 12v so it needs a ballast resistor to reduce the voltage down to 9v. If your coil is the original coil it might be "ballasted" ie have a ballast resistor built in or have a ballast resistor "in-line" to the positive terminal. If it ballasted it might say on the coil.
I bought the wrong coil originally so I fitted a resistor.
To try and summarise or even just not to confuse myself:
Here's something you can do, once you fit your coil, with your engine running put the negative tip of a voltage meter to ground then the positive terminal to the + terminal on your coil if it's about 9v you are OK. If it's much more fit a resistor if it's less hmmm well that's another problem I guess. Mine runs about 10v which I think is acceptable.
- Your ignition unit needs to be happy running at 9v, (although at start up I think it jumps to about 12v).
- To replace your coil get a ballasted coil OR an un-ballasted coil and fit a ballast resistor inline to the + terminal getting a ballasted coil is easier, less connections, cheaper.
If you are getting a weak spark you can check your HT leads with a voltage meter I think they should read 5ohms but I can't remember for sure. I'm sure someone will put me right. It could equally be timing, poor rotor arm/button, distributor cap etc
Good luck with the coil though...
Steve


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