restart
Well-Known Member
Your first post item 2 says you had 12V at negative side of coil?
I would say the red hot ballast was a me issue but that seems to be a pretty common issue reported here with the new starter and I think is related to having things hooked up to that always on 12:00 post.I am not familiar with coils that have an internal ballast. Unless that ballast was switched in some way, it would be easier to just have a lower tension coil, since that is effectively what you will get if there is an internal ballast resistor that is not switched.
At any rate, the Pertronix should withstand the coil kickback without any resistor.
I am still perplexed by your issue with a red-hot ballast resistor. That implies some heavy current flow through the coil and Pertronix unit. So I'd do some of the resistance checks I outlined above. It may be that there is a wiring error or a shorted coil that is causing your no-spark issue. My money would be on the coil, since there are not that many wires to mix up, and none of them that I am aware of would short the coil primary to ground.
This is precisely the case, it happened to me and I was alarmed to see the red ballast. Always hot when ignition is on and not just starting position.I would say the red hot ballast was a me issue but that seems to be a pretty common issue reported here with the new starter and I think is related to having things hooked up to that always on 12:00 post.
This makes no sense. The ballast resistor is only powered when the ignition is on. It has nothing to do with the starter. Using an older starter with the black and red wire, the ballast is BYPASSED when cranking. The olny reason the ballast shoudl be overheating is if the coil is shorted.This is precisely the case, it happened to me and I was alarmed to see the red ballast. Always hot when ignition is on and not just starting position.
My point was that the starter circuit is supposed to BYPASS the ballast resistor. So the resistor is supposed to be OK with having a constant 12V applied to it. Under normal RUN conditions, the original circuit has 12 volts on the ballast resistor whenever the ignition is on (except in the start position where it is bypassed...Scott, while I would agree with you in context, while I was on the phone with Don he told me (before I had told him anything about my wiiring aside from “new starter”) that I should unplug the black/red wire since the resister would get very warm. And indeed it was.
I agree that the resister is supposed to used to handling 12v routinely so why should it matter, except that in our case it’s an unnecessary circuit, as previously discussed. Is yours bright red and hot when activated? Can’t say I had looked at mine before that moment.
And I think the issue was not it getting red hot while cranking, more it getting hot when hooked up to the always-on 12:00 position of the starter
Interesting. So the issue is that if the coil is fed directly from 12 volts when the ignition is OFF (which would only occur if the black and red bypass wire was in place on the newer starter with the always on 12:00 post), then the entire green wire ignition circuit is being fed through the ballast resistor. That makes sense.I believe you are feeding 12 different circuits in the car through the ballast resister when the black/red wire is hot - all the green circuits
That statement seems inconsistent with what you said earlierOnce again, on the new starter the 12:00 post is live only with ignition on and when cranking. It is not needed as the newer starters have permanent magnets and crank much faster.
New starters I have found are always hot so if you hook them up the ballast can turn cherry red!
I'll reattach the resistor to the circuit temporarily so that we can sort this out, but I'll say that even though I had the "home run" starter wire hooked up, I would have still had the ignition to the "RUN" status since I would have needed fuel pump relay activated, ECU activated, etc in order for the engine to (try to) start. At this point I should also be able to undo the home run starter wire since the purpose of that wire was to circumvent the ignition circuit to the starter in case that was the reason my engine wasn't starting. Since the result (no start) was the same with or without the home run cable vs standard ignition circuit, it doesn't appear that the issue is upstream of the starter, but rather something downstream.That statement seems inconsistent with what you said earlier
So your first statement doesn't align with @e9Leveque's experience and Don's statement above, but your second statement does.
If the 12:00 post is only energized with "the ignition on and when cranking", then that would not cause the ballast resistor to overheat because the ignition circuits would already be energized by the ignition switch (and the main relay). so there would be no current flowing from the starter to the ballast resistor.
If the starter 12:00 post is hot all the time, then I can see that the ballast resistor would overheat because the current would be flowing from the starter through the ballast resistor and to the coil, where it would then flow to the non-energized ignition circuit (green wire). This would draw a lot of current that might overheat the resistor.
This situation would ONLY exist however, when the key was off, since as soon as the ignition was on, the green wire circuits would be powered, and the current though the resistor would stop.
@e9Leveque What were the specific conditions when you had the red hot resistor? Was this with the ignition on or off? Was it only after you set up the "home run" starter wire to the battery? If so, isa it possible that you were cranking the starter with the ignition key off???
Was the red hot resistor occurring with the ignition on or off?I'll reattach the resistor to the circuit temporarily so that we can sort this out, but I'll say that even though I had the "home run" starter wire hooked up, I would have still had the ignition to the "RUN" status since I would have needed fuel pump relay activated, ECU activated, etc in order for the engine to (try to) start. At this point I should also be able to undo the home run starter wire since the purpose of that wire was to circumvent the ignition circuit to the starter in case that was the reason my engine wasn't starting. Since the result (no start) was the same with or without the home run cable vs standard ignition circuit, it doesn't appear that the issue is upstream of the starter, but rather something downstream.
That statement seems inconsistent with what you said earlier
So your first statement doesn't align with @e9Leveque's experience and Don's statement above, but your second statement does.
If the 12:00 post is only energized with "the ignition on and when cranking", then that would not cause the ballast resistor to overheat because the ignition circuits would already be energized by the ignition switch (and the main relay). so there would be no current flowing from the starter to the ballast resistor.
If the starter 12:00 post is hot all the time, then I can see that the ballast resistor would overheat because the current would be flowing from the starter through the ballast resistor and to the coil, where it would then flow to the non-energized ignition circuit (green wire). This would draw a lot of current that might overheat the resistor.
This situation would ONLY exist however, when the key was off, since as soon as the ignition was on, the green wire circuits would be powered, and the current though the resistor would stop.
@e9Leveque What were the specific conditions when you had the red hot resistor? Was this with the ignition on or off? Was it only after you set up the "home run" starter wire to the battery? If so, isa it possible that you were cranking the starter with the ignition key off???
That is SOOO weird, because with the engine running the other side of the ballast resistor (the non-coil side) is at 12 volts, energized by the ignition switch and main relay.I never meant to imply that always hot also included with no ignition. If the key is on to Run, it is hot and stays that way. I can’t explain why this happens but I am telling the truth, when that wire was hooked up to the coil and the green wire was hooked up to the ballast, the ballast turned cherry red and started to smoke, the car was running at that time. When that wire was removed I had normal operation, this is a well known feature of the newer starters, I am not the only one to experience this.
The pertronix has a plastic sticker on it which melts when it’s had a melt down . Sometimes called telltale. You can also smell the burnt internals.Success!!’
I wish that I could tell you that I know exactly what the step was that made the difference. I suppose if I go back to the original set up, I could go through part by part and identify what might have failed. As it is right now I have a new Bosch, blue ignition coil, no resistor and a new pertronix. If I had to guess, I think that I had put the car back together with the black MSD coil, which does not have an internal ballot resistor, and apparently put out a smaller spark, which is sometimes difficult systems to work with. I never had reinstalled the original coil in the previous testing.
Alternatively, I also went through and added some more significant grounding between the engine and the frame, so perhaps this was the classic issue of poor grounding.
Either way, the engine does start now. Now it’s on to deal with all the leaks that I’m sure I will encounter. Thank you guys for all of your help working through this. Scott, if you would like I can hook up the ballast resistor to the system temporarily to do the testing above that you had asked to satisfy your curiosity as to the 12:00 post on the new starter.
The pertronix has a plastic sticker on it which melts when it’s had a melt down . Sometimes called telltale. You can also smell the burnt internals.