[AT] No spark
John Wilkens
jwilkens at eoni.com
Sun Aug 14 09:44:35 PDT 2005
Matthew, I find your comments to Jeff interesting. Think I'll copy them
for future trial. But, what is a "bug light" and a neon light? Easy to
get at a parts store? Can you use a timing light? John W.
At 09:21 AM 08/14/2005, you wrote:
>Take a 12V bug light and put it across the coil's low voltage terminals and
>try cranking the engine. The light should flicker on and off as the points
>open and close. If that happens, then the problem is on the high voltage
>side. If that does not happen, then the problem is on the low voltage side.
>
>Put a neon lamp from the hight voltage contact on the coil to ground and try
>turning it over. The neon lamp should flash brightly. If it does not you
>have a bad coil.
>
>Next, re-connect the center wire to the distributer to the coil and try your
>neon light on each of the spark plug holes on the distributer. Turn it over
>and you should get bright flashes, but less often (1/4 or 1/2 to be exact)
>If that is the case you got bad wires or plugs or something not seated right.
>If that fails, something in the top of the distributer or roter is messed
>up. The contacts on top of the distributer should be checked and the contct
>on the rotor.
>
>It is not black magic, just a matter of figuring out where it is broken.
>
>--MAtthew
>
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