So as some of you may know, I had pulled my engine in order to paint the engine bay and in the process had upgraded/restored most of the non-engine components. I put everything back together and yesterday was trying to start the engine for the first time in a few months. No luck. I had Don on Facetime and we walked through some options but weren't able to resolve it. So that I take some of the burden off of him and his expertise, thought I'd post here for some thoughts.
So that we lay out the case correctly. 1972 CSi. Was running fine in December before I started this. Engine pulled by disconnecting every wire running to it but not removing distributor, which I left as-is. Changes to the car by me are as follows:
1. New Bosch starter (the smaller model most are recommending these days)
2. New battery moved to trunk but confirmed good power being delivered to engine bay area
3. Ignition coil changed from old Bosch blue to MDS black
4. Pertronix distributor not touched
5. Ballast resister (ceramic) not touched
6. Distributor to spark plugs wiring changed prior to engine pulling
7. New spark plugs installed after engine pull
The problem. Engine cranks but does not fully start. The steps taken to diagnose
1. Don had me disconnect starter electrically from system and run a "home run" wire to starter so that I can touch other end to battery and fire starter directly. That works, so starter deemed functional
2. Using multimeter to test, ignition coil has 12V at its positive side and had 5V at negative side (with MDS black coil). Ballast resister had 10V on top dropping to 1V by its bottom. Under Don's direction, removed ballast resister from system and wired both ECU lead (white wire) the other wire going to ballast directly to the ignition coil. Getting 12V on one side, 5V on the other. Firing the starter did not give me a spark out the top of the ignition coil. Question became whether my new ignition coil is the problem so I re-installed the old Bosch blue that was in the car at the time of it running. With that one, see 12V at positive and 1V at negative. No spark out the top when firing starter. Interestingly, when removing the black wire going from ignition coil to the distributor, the voltage at the negative side of the coil is 12V and voltage at tower is 12V. So when distributor is connected and car has key turned on but not cranking, the distributor being connected is causing 11V drop across the two leads of the ignition coil.
3. Pulled the top off the distributor cap to make sure the rotor is spinning. It is when starter cranks. The latest thinking is that perhaps the Pertronix unit has been fried in some way that it's shorting out or not firing correctly. When it's connected, firing off the starter causes that 1V at negative side of coil to rise to 4.5V
So, questions:
1. Utility in changing out the Pertronix unit? It does not have a model number on its side, only a lot or serial number, but from assessment online should be replaced with a 1868 Pertronix unit
2. Utility in a new Bosch blue ignition coil? The blue appears to have internal resister so would allow me to keep the ballast resistor out of the system, which may simplify things.
3. I'll recheck all of my ground points. I have two large grounds, one running from lower engine block to battery tray to side strut on the battery side, the other from screw on transmission to the inside wall of the transmission tunnel. Since I did paint the engine bay and tunnel, I'll make sure that paint is scraped off in these locations so that I know I'm getting good contact for the ground. The battery in the trunk is separately grounded to one of the large bolts that secure the seat belts bolted directly into the frame.
Sorry for the long post but thought better to put out all of the information I know so that you aren't having to ask as many clarifying questions.
I had been hoping to have this running in time for German day at the local large cars and coffee this weekend, but I may be a visitor instead of participant this year.
So that we lay out the case correctly. 1972 CSi. Was running fine in December before I started this. Engine pulled by disconnecting every wire running to it but not removing distributor, which I left as-is. Changes to the car by me are as follows:
1. New Bosch starter (the smaller model most are recommending these days)
2. New battery moved to trunk but confirmed good power being delivered to engine bay area
3. Ignition coil changed from old Bosch blue to MDS black
4. Pertronix distributor not touched
5. Ballast resister (ceramic) not touched
6. Distributor to spark plugs wiring changed prior to engine pulling
7. New spark plugs installed after engine pull
The problem. Engine cranks but does not fully start. The steps taken to diagnose
1. Don had me disconnect starter electrically from system and run a "home run" wire to starter so that I can touch other end to battery and fire starter directly. That works, so starter deemed functional
2. Using multimeter to test, ignition coil has 12V at its positive side and had 5V at negative side (with MDS black coil). Ballast resister had 10V on top dropping to 1V by its bottom. Under Don's direction, removed ballast resister from system and wired both ECU lead (white wire) the other wire going to ballast directly to the ignition coil. Getting 12V on one side, 5V on the other. Firing the starter did not give me a spark out the top of the ignition coil. Question became whether my new ignition coil is the problem so I re-installed the old Bosch blue that was in the car at the time of it running. With that one, see 12V at positive and 1V at negative. No spark out the top when firing starter. Interestingly, when removing the black wire going from ignition coil to the distributor, the voltage at the negative side of the coil is 12V and voltage at tower is 12V. So when distributor is connected and car has key turned on but not cranking, the distributor being connected is causing 11V drop across the two leads of the ignition coil.
3. Pulled the top off the distributor cap to make sure the rotor is spinning. It is when starter cranks. The latest thinking is that perhaps the Pertronix unit has been fried in some way that it's shorting out or not firing correctly. When it's connected, firing off the starter causes that 1V at negative side of coil to rise to 4.5V
So, questions:
1. Utility in changing out the Pertronix unit? It does not have a model number on its side, only a lot or serial number, but from assessment online should be replaced with a 1868 Pertronix unit
2. Utility in a new Bosch blue ignition coil? The blue appears to have internal resister so would allow me to keep the ballast resistor out of the system, which may simplify things.
3. I'll recheck all of my ground points. I have two large grounds, one running from lower engine block to battery tray to side strut on the battery side, the other from screw on transmission to the inside wall of the transmission tunnel. Since I did paint the engine bay and tunnel, I'll make sure that paint is scraped off in these locations so that I know I'm getting good contact for the ground. The battery in the trunk is separately grounded to one of the large bolts that secure the seat belts bolted directly into the frame.
Sorry for the long post but thought better to put out all of the information I know so that you aren't having to ask as many clarifying questions.
I had been hoping to have this running in time for German day at the local large cars and coffee this weekend, but I may be a visitor instead of participant this year.