just picked up a 65 mustang vert and trying to get it running. here are the pertinent specs:
holley 1940 (just rebuilt by me), LOM, pertronix I, SMP FD 471 coil (1.5 ohm primary, 9.6 kohm secondary, 12v - use with external resistor), all inherited from previous owner with unknown history. cap, rotor, wires and plugs are new.
i can get the motor to start but have to hold about 1/3-1/2 throttle to keep it running. dies instantly when letting off the throttle. the coil wire from ign. switch to positive terminal checks 12v in on position UNTIL i install it on the coil and it drops to 4v at the coil terminal. checks ~6.5-7v in start position while cranking.
this leads me to believe my resistance wire value has increased over time or has a really bad connection. is the resistance wire one continuous piece or does it break at the firewall? if it breaks at the firewall, what should the resistance be for each run? i am having a hard time following the wire under the dash with the front seats installed.
would the following be a good test: run 12v through a toggle switch directly to the coil, start the motor, open the switch and see if it idles on it's own. i would just have to close the toggle switch to bring the coil back to 4v and the motor would die on it's own right? any other things to worry about other than temporarily running the coil hot?
if this works, i guess i would have to remove the seats and track down the high resistance value. probably a poorly crimped butt connector somewhere. any other suggestions?
holley 1940 (just rebuilt by me), LOM, pertronix I, SMP FD 471 coil (1.5 ohm primary, 9.6 kohm secondary, 12v - use with external resistor), all inherited from previous owner with unknown history. cap, rotor, wires and plugs are new.
i can get the motor to start but have to hold about 1/3-1/2 throttle to keep it running. dies instantly when letting off the throttle. the coil wire from ign. switch to positive terminal checks 12v in on position UNTIL i install it on the coil and it drops to 4v at the coil terminal. checks ~6.5-7v in start position while cranking.
this leads me to believe my resistance wire value has increased over time or has a really bad connection. is the resistance wire one continuous piece or does it break at the firewall? if it breaks at the firewall, what should the resistance be for each run? i am having a hard time following the wire under the dash with the front seats installed.
would the following be a good test: run 12v through a toggle switch directly to the coil, start the motor, open the switch and see if it idles on it's own. i would just have to close the toggle switch to bring the coil back to 4v and the motor would die on it's own right? any other things to worry about other than temporarily running the coil hot?
if this works, i guess i would have to remove the seats and track down the high resistance value. probably a poorly crimped butt connector somewhere. any other suggestions?