jack fish":3673qpho said:
OK Joe, I'm soliciting your honest opinion.

Anyone else's for that matter!
And I'm sure this has been asked and answered a thousand times aleady, I replaced the stock coil about 8 months ago. Is there any reason whatsoever to go to a higher voltage coil?

Why not?
An ignition coil is really just a transformer. It "transforms" low-voltage, high-current electrical flow into high-voltage, low-current flow.
When the breaker points close, current flows through the primary windings of the coil, through the points, and finally back to the battery through "ground". This induces an electromagnetic field in the coil that surrounds the secondary windings in the coil. When the points open, the primary current stops, and the electromagnetic field collapses, which induces a high-voltage current in the secondary windings. This voltage is directly related to the number of windings (ratio) in the secondary circuit. The more windings, the higher the voltage. The voltage then bulds up until it is finally able to jump the spark plug gap. IT WILL NOT DEVELOP ANY HIGHER VOLTAGE than needed to jump this gap. So unless you really need more voltage to jump a larger gap, it won't do any good. Higher compression pressures also require more voltage.
HOWEVER, there is a catch. When we add more windings to increase voltage, the CURRENT is further reduced, and it is actually the current (measured in joules) that lights the fire. There is no free lunch. The only real way to have both is to increase the primary current. This is best done by using a coil designed for the task with lower impedance. Trouble is, breaker points won't carry that extra current for long without burning. Enter the so-called "electronic" (breakerless) ignition. Then there is no excuse to use a puny coil. Why Ford chose to use that sorry stock coil on the DS2 is beyond me, it is essentially the same coil as the breaker points ignition, ballast resistor and all.
You asked for my honest opinion. On a stock engine using a stock breaker point ignition there is no real world benefit to installing a "high voltage" coil. The engine isn't capable of developing the dynamics that require higher voltage to fire the plugs, and once the plug fires, the extra voltage potential is wasted. With the "high voltage" coil the current has also been reduced, so there will actually be LESS available heat (current) to light the fire, although it is doubtful that you would ever notice it.
If you modify the engine so that it can really benefit from higher voltage, best to upgrade the whole package so that it can handle higher primary current. Keep in mind that the early factory "electronic" ignitions retained the breaker points and merely used them to trigger a module that carried the higher current. The points last practically forever in those systems, and they tend to work quite well.
Bottom line is this; if you try to run much more than 3-4 amps through your breaker points you will have trouble. Just like Mr. Kettering and associates detirmined at the old Detroit Electric Co. (Delco) many years ago. And due to the laws of physics you can only get about so much ZAP out of 3 amps @ 12 volts. "High voltage" sells coils, but the current does the work. Sorta like "horsepower" sells cars, but torque gets the work done.
Joe