brushwolf
Active member
- Joined
- Oct 19, 2017
- Messages
- 37
- Reaction score
- 5
- Location
- Minnesota
- My Car
- 73 Fastback Mach clone, 466, CJ Toploader
This is a 73 which did not come with factory gauges or tach. They were swapped in a decade ago along with rebuilt 71 Lincoln 460 with DOVE heads and CJ toploader which replaced 351 and C6.
Not run since installed, except when hot wired. Has factory 71 Lincoln coil with a resistor mounted on it and a Mallory dual point ignition. Starts only by jumping full 12 volts separate wire direct to coil on startup.
Of course, it has been so long ago that I abandoned this project in my garage that I have forgotten exactly what I swapped in, but believe I had scrounged up all the wiring for factory tach and gauges off EBay and a nearby salvage yard and had installed them.
Trio of factory gauges (ammeter, temp, oil pressure) appears to work when ignition key is in "on" position and engine running. Tach apparently doesn't work though and engine starts running rough and dies if I take the "Hotwire" off coil.
Also there are 4 wires on two connectors hanging down from firewall (which I assume are backup lights and neutral start switch) and are not connected to anything.. Engine still cranks with key though, so don't think those are related to my lack of ignition voltage.
Backup lights irrelevant and engine would not crank over at all if an open neutral start switch was the culprit. Car was previously equipped with a C6, but am guessing replacement wiring must have circumvented that switch for it to even crank over with key.
Using a test light, ignition hot wire appears to have a nominal current to coil wire after the resistor in "on" or "start" ignition key position. But, not much.. Lights up brighter in "start" than "on" key position, but dim in both cases.
The 12 volt small test bulb lights up somewhat better when hooked up before the resistor, still somewhat dim in "on" position, but brighter again in "start" position..
I know on most older Fords that the "I" terminal on solenoid would usually have a second wire to coil positive terminal that provided the full 12 volts to coil only when ignition turned to "start" position and solenoid activated.
But, this 73 wiring already has a second factory right angle end wire on the "I" solenoid terminal and it only has one ignition wire to the resistor on coil and then another from resistor to the coil positive terminal.
I am guessing that maybe, somewhere inside the wiring harness, that wire on the "I" terminal connects into the same ignition circuit that my single coil wire is on and it momentarily sends a full 12 volts to coil circuit when key is in "start" position.
1) Does the 73 wiring by chance have a GM-like resistor wire somewhere in its ignition circuitry, so by use of the separate 1971 resistor mounted on coil, I am actually reducing the voltage twice as much as I should be?
2) Can someone with coil ignition and factory tach and gauges confirm that there is only the one ignition wire to resistor and/or coil on hot side and whether there is even an external resistor present on a 73? If there is a second wire to coil positive terminal, what color and where does it come from?
After lots of reading, stumbled across the fact (?) that the ignition current also runs through the factory tach and so if tach fails, then ignition circuit fails also. Not sure what years that applied to..
Aftermarket tachs usually have a wire from tach to negative of coil, but none present here, just a single wire from coil negative terminal to distributor..
3) Shouldn't there be another wire for the tach at coil negative terminal? If so, what color?
4) Is this true that factory tach is part of ignition circuit? And if it is, how come I have any juice at all to coil from factory ignition hot wire when tach doesn't appear to work? Or does tach failure just diminish the ignition voltage, but not necessarily eliminate it?
5) How can I test tach to see if it is bad, and if it is, are they repairable?
Pulled speedo/tach gauge assembly back far enough from dash to see that 2 wires plug into the dash harness from tach, so they appear to be connected at that end anyway..
Have looked at a couple wiring diagrams, but electrical ain't my strong suit.. Also, wiring colors don't match consistently, some do, others don't... Exercise in frustration...
6) Are there any other visible or hidden (or possibly missing) connectors or wires in the tach circuit that I can check to see if present and functioning?
Not sure if I should be focusing on tach to see why it isn't working due to suspicion it is disabling my ignition, or if I should be focusing on ignition (or lack thereof..) as being possibly the reason the tach doesn't work - or if both issues are the result of a missing connection, wiring, or a bad tach..
Simple, common-sense practical ideas for figuring this out? Getting frustrated.
Thought I was in the home stretch with almost everything new, but since have had steering line leak, several antifreeze leaks, Holley carb accelerator pump leak, wrecked a starter and had to change intake (Weiand Stealth was too tall for Ram Air stuff to allow an air filter...).
Got all those other things fixed now. But, after all that I feel like I have only worked my way right back where I thought I started, in that ignition voltage is funky and tach not working.
Not run since installed, except when hot wired. Has factory 71 Lincoln coil with a resistor mounted on it and a Mallory dual point ignition. Starts only by jumping full 12 volts separate wire direct to coil on startup.
Of course, it has been so long ago that I abandoned this project in my garage that I have forgotten exactly what I swapped in, but believe I had scrounged up all the wiring for factory tach and gauges off EBay and a nearby salvage yard and had installed them.
Trio of factory gauges (ammeter, temp, oil pressure) appears to work when ignition key is in "on" position and engine running. Tach apparently doesn't work though and engine starts running rough and dies if I take the "Hotwire" off coil.
Also there are 4 wires on two connectors hanging down from firewall (which I assume are backup lights and neutral start switch) and are not connected to anything.. Engine still cranks with key though, so don't think those are related to my lack of ignition voltage.
Backup lights irrelevant and engine would not crank over at all if an open neutral start switch was the culprit. Car was previously equipped with a C6, but am guessing replacement wiring must have circumvented that switch for it to even crank over with key.
Using a test light, ignition hot wire appears to have a nominal current to coil wire after the resistor in "on" or "start" ignition key position. But, not much.. Lights up brighter in "start" than "on" key position, but dim in both cases.
The 12 volt small test bulb lights up somewhat better when hooked up before the resistor, still somewhat dim in "on" position, but brighter again in "start" position..
I know on most older Fords that the "I" terminal on solenoid would usually have a second wire to coil positive terminal that provided the full 12 volts to coil only when ignition turned to "start" position and solenoid activated.
But, this 73 wiring already has a second factory right angle end wire on the "I" solenoid terminal and it only has one ignition wire to the resistor on coil and then another from resistor to the coil positive terminal.
I am guessing that maybe, somewhere inside the wiring harness, that wire on the "I" terminal connects into the same ignition circuit that my single coil wire is on and it momentarily sends a full 12 volts to coil circuit when key is in "start" position.
1) Does the 73 wiring by chance have a GM-like resistor wire somewhere in its ignition circuitry, so by use of the separate 1971 resistor mounted on coil, I am actually reducing the voltage twice as much as I should be?
2) Can someone with coil ignition and factory tach and gauges confirm that there is only the one ignition wire to resistor and/or coil on hot side and whether there is even an external resistor present on a 73? If there is a second wire to coil positive terminal, what color and where does it come from?
After lots of reading, stumbled across the fact (?) that the ignition current also runs through the factory tach and so if tach fails, then ignition circuit fails also. Not sure what years that applied to..
Aftermarket tachs usually have a wire from tach to negative of coil, but none present here, just a single wire from coil negative terminal to distributor..
3) Shouldn't there be another wire for the tach at coil negative terminal? If so, what color?
4) Is this true that factory tach is part of ignition circuit? And if it is, how come I have any juice at all to coil from factory ignition hot wire when tach doesn't appear to work? Or does tach failure just diminish the ignition voltage, but not necessarily eliminate it?
5) How can I test tach to see if it is bad, and if it is, are they repairable?
Pulled speedo/tach gauge assembly back far enough from dash to see that 2 wires plug into the dash harness from tach, so they appear to be connected at that end anyway..
Have looked at a couple wiring diagrams, but electrical ain't my strong suit.. Also, wiring colors don't match consistently, some do, others don't... Exercise in frustration...
6) Are there any other visible or hidden (or possibly missing) connectors or wires in the tach circuit that I can check to see if present and functioning?
Not sure if I should be focusing on tach to see why it isn't working due to suspicion it is disabling my ignition, or if I should be focusing on ignition (or lack thereof..) as being possibly the reason the tach doesn't work - or if both issues are the result of a missing connection, wiring, or a bad tach..
Simple, common-sense practical ideas for figuring this out? Getting frustrated.
Thought I was in the home stretch with almost everything new, but since have had steering line leak, several antifreeze leaks, Holley carb accelerator pump leak, wrecked a starter and had to change intake (Weiand Stealth was too tall for Ram Air stuff to allow an air filter...).
Got all those other things fixed now. But, after all that I feel like I have only worked my way right back where I thought I started, in that ignition voltage is funky and tach not working.