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Bob, go have a nap...
ABSOLUTELY.....but.....HOW DIFICULT IS IT TO SPELL ENGINE COMPONENTS CORRECTLY? Or perhaps the person using the word ("dizzy") doesn't know how to spell the component correctly......it's not "funny"......it just sounds stupid for a grown, reasonably educated person to talk in euphemisms......like a child......LOL
Maybe he is DIZZY
ABSOLUTELY.....but.....HOW DIFICULT IS IT TO SPELL ENGINE COMPONENTS CORRECTLY?
You probably never heard of this euphemism either: "picking your nose and rolling booger pills with your thumb and finger" = a soothing experience......and "dizzy never equals a distributor" ..... only to the uneducated or someone that doesn't know how to spell....I had to look that up
Six common euphemisms are:
Pretty much sums it up - LOL
- A bun in the oven: pregnant.
- No longer with us: dead.
- Let go: fired.
- Plastered: drunk.
- Time of the month: menstruation.
- DIZZY - Distributor
Time for bed - Hopefully I won’t bee DIZZY at the Town Hall tomorrow
I did not run a resistor but am considering. Upon further thought, I think what is happening is when cranking, I'm back feeding power to the electric cooling fan, electric water pump, electric fuel pump and electric vacuum pump, which is in fact easily overloading the 10a fuse.Are you still running a resistor in the system? If so it needs to be bypassed by soldering a wire across the terminals or just making a jumper to plug the wires together. I would try to isolate the system by unhooking the power to the coil and crank it to see if it blows a fuse, and if it does, unhook the power to the module and try. Why the fuse in the ignition wire?
The only time current flows in the secondary is when the actual spark occurs...its NOT a range as noted by 600ma to 2 amps and it's limited by the impedance of the coil's secondary resistance AND it's core loss or I2r loss. How do you know the peak current is...did you measure it or that's what the advertisement said? How did you measure it? Sounds like guesstimates......not actual facts.....Bob,
The only person who is uneducated about the efficiency difference between a canister coil & an E core coil............is YOU. Find some PROOF & post it that claims that a canister coil produces a hotter spark.
The heat in the spark is what ignites the A/F mixture. That heat comes from secondary coil current.
The MSD Blaster 2 & 3 canister coils have a 140mA peak current.
The MSD Blaster 8207 E core coil has 300mA.
The high power MSD E core coils have sec currents ranging from 600 mA to...2 amps.
As promised, I will update issues.If any other issues arise, I'll keep those interested posted.
With all the $$$, time and aggravation involved recently, there is a RB Prestolite Dual point distributor available on this site for approximately 400 dollars .....truly a plug and play installation.....remember this for the next time (and there WILL BE a next time) that the ECU box and related parts crap out, you could be cruising instead of fixing your car......remember....fancy gizmos don't work......JMO......As promised, I will update issues.
After 7 HEI modules popping almost immediately in some cases, I have officially given up on the HEI experience on my 1973 Dodge Charger. I can not explain why some of the HEI modules worked for a short time, then popped, while the last 3 modules almost immediately popped. After throwing part after part at this problem (3 new coils, new ignition switch, new pickup coil, new starter {unrelated}, new coil wire and plugs) and hours of research, enough is enough. While yes, it's possible I've got something screwy with the wiring or HEI modules are not what they used to be, maybe. (even though using quality Elgin Nappa modules) Either way, I QUIT.
With all that said, I have since installed a FBO ignition box and it started right up. So, what conclusion do I come to? Too early to say, I've read somewhere some issues where there were clockwise versus counterclockwise distributors. I will leave it up to the experts here to debate why the HEI did not work for me. At this point, I don't know nor do I care, all I know is, it's finally starting and running. Make of that what you will.
As promised, I will update issues.
After 7 HEI modules popping almost immediately in some cases, I have officially given up on the HEI experience on my 1973 Dodge Charger. I can not explain why some of the HEI modules worked for a short time, then popped, while the last 3 modules almost immediately popped. After throwing part after part at this problem (3 new coils, new ignition switch, new pickup coil, new starter {unrelated}, new coil wire and plugs) and hours of research, enough is enough. While yes, it's possible I've got something screwy with the wiring or HEI modules are not what they used to be, maybe. (even though using quality Elgin Nappa modules) Either way, I QUIT.
With all that said, I have since installed a FBO ignition box and it started right up. So, what conclusion do I come to? Too early to say, I've read somewhere some issues where there were clockwise versus counterclockwise distributors. I will leave it up to the experts here to debate why the HEI did not work for me. At this point, I don't know nor do I care, all I know is, it's finally starting and running. Make of that what you will.
With all the $$$, time and aggravation involved recently, there is a RB Prestolite Dual point distributor available on this site for approximately 400 dollars .....truly a plug and play installation.....remember this for the next time (and there WILL BE a next time) that the ECU box and related parts crap out, you could be cruising instead of fixing your car......remember....fancy gizmos don't work......JMO......
BOB RENTON