- Joined
- May 11, 2023
- Messages
- 112
- Reaction score
- 114
- Location
- Long Beach, CA
- My Car
- 1972 "Q" Code Mach1
Well, I made my first attempt at starting the new motor for the first time. No luck! It tried to start. A couple of cylinders fired at random but nothing. My buddy and I thought we weren't getting any fuel, so I quickly installed an electric fuel pump so that issue was eliminated. Still no joy!. My buddy thinks it's carburation and I think it is ignition. The reason I think it is ignition is this..... When I bought the car, the previous owner had removed the points and installed a Mallory UniLite ignition module. I have never used one so I am not real familiar with it. Also, the module has been in the car for some time and it did work before the engine grenaded (Prior to my ownership). When I test the ignition voltage with the distributor module disconnected, there is 12 volts at the coil, through the ballast resistor and at the red wire to the distributor module. When I plug in the distributor, the voltage at the ignition switch side of the ballast resistor is 7 volts and everywhere else is 5.6 volts (at the coil, the distributor and the outbound side of the ballast resistor). BTW, the coil is original.
I can remove the #1 plug and rotate the distributor to get the plug to spark. I can see it visually spark.
The initial timing is set at TDC, I have fuel because the accelerator pump is squirting. Starting fluid doesn't help, and the #1 spark plug seems to be sparking. I am taken back by the voltage drop. I wouldn't think that the UniLite module would create such a load to drop the voltage like that. Does anyone have any comment. I am tempted to just buy another distributor with an electronic module built in.
I can remove the #1 plug and rotate the distributor to get the plug to spark. I can see it visually spark.
The initial timing is set at TDC, I have fuel because the accelerator pump is squirting. Starting fluid doesn't help, and the #1 spark plug seems to be sparking. I am taken back by the voltage drop. I wouldn't think that the UniLite module would create such a load to drop the voltage like that. Does anyone have any comment. I am tempted to just buy another distributor with an electronic module built in.