nah we can talk you through this too, it's not rocket scientryI have a 123 on the shelf that I've been hesitant to install. The process seems to be above my pay grade.
nah we can talk you through this too, it's not rocket scientryI have a 123 on the shelf that I've been hesitant to install. The process seems to be above my pay grade.
Yay! No need to look at fuel at this point.
Turn the key and without starting the car- test for voltage at the coil.
Amateur question- would I use my multimeter to measure voltage at the primary winding or the secondary winding? And would it make a difference if at some point prior to my ownership, a start button was wired to the ignition?
Next - pull coil wire from distributor cap- lay the bare end right next to unpainted metal and crank engine.
Answer is? Blue spark.
Thanks!
I think I goofed. No spark at the plug. I mistakenly pulled the wire from coil to condenser and laid it on the manifold. That gave a spark. I did not try the actual ignition wire from coil to distributor.I'm a little confused.
You report no spark at a spark plug when cranking with the plug grounded to the engine , BUT you get a spark from the coil wire when you crank and hold the coil wire a short distance from ground. This is strange. It does mean the points are working properly. You would not get a spark out of the coil wire if the points were not making and breaking. You should then get a spark at a plug unless the rotor is missing or the plug was bad or not actually grounded. It is best to do these spark/no spark tests with a helper or a remote starter switch. It's tough to do and see otherwise.
I'd repeat the coil wire test with the new coil wire. If you are still getting a spark there, re-do the spark plug test. You can do it with an extra spark plug or with a screwdriver as @JFENG suggests. Again, I'd be surprised if you still get a spark at the coil wire and not at the plug.
Hopefully, you get a spark at both. Next, dribble a few tablespoons of gas into each carb throat with the throttles held open. Try to start. It should pop some and maybe even run for a few seconds. If it does you have a fuel delivery problem. Do not start replacing more parts at this point. We need to find out which component is bad.
I dropped the underside of the steering column to check the ignition switch. Looks like mine is coming apart.What kind of ignition system - points or electronic etc do you have. How old is the coil and other ignition components - cap, rotor, plug wires, wires at coil, ballast resistor (if used) etc. All fuel hoses in good condition and tight? Fuel hose at gas tank sender tight? Gas cap correct and not holding vacuum? Other suspect can be intermitttent ignition switch.
Congrats! Thanks for reporting back. What did you end up doing to correct the no fuel issue?The car would still crank but not turn over to start. I was still getting intermittent spark and no fuel.
I pulled the sender and cleaned the screen. Fuel lines were all good. I also have a new sender on hand just in case this one ever goes.Congrats! Thanks for reporting back. What did you end up doing to correct the no fuel issue?