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On my 1968 GTX, a former (now deceased) owner (who was a mechanic at a Dodge dealership) had converted the car to electronic ignition, actually doing all the wiring himself versus using the Mopar electronic ignition kit.
The car currently is running all the typical factory-type parts for this:
-Mopar electronic voltage regulator, which I've just replaced with a new one
-Mopar type ECU and electronic distributor
-dual ballast
-MSD coil is new
I'm getting the following voltage to the coil:
-key ON, not running: 2.2V
-cranking: 9.4V
-running: 4.3V
Questions:
1. These voltages seem low to me. Are they?
2. I wonder why he used a dual ballast instead of a single one. Why would someone do that?
3. Do ballasts get "weak" with age or are they simply "working" or "not working"?
TIA!
The car currently is running all the typical factory-type parts for this:
-Mopar electronic voltage regulator, which I've just replaced with a new one
-Mopar type ECU and electronic distributor
-dual ballast
-MSD coil is new
I'm getting the following voltage to the coil:
-key ON, not running: 2.2V
-cranking: 9.4V
-running: 4.3V
Questions:
1. These voltages seem low to me. Are they?
2. I wonder why he used a dual ballast instead of a single one. Why would someone do that?
3. Do ballasts get "weak" with age or are they simply "working" or "not working"?
TIA!