D
Deleted member 8987
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Oh, NO! You violated the cardinal rule!
You HAVE to change the coil first!
Joke, son, just a joke.
That said, for me, testing the coil in the field when I suspect I have a problem, and no scope, is to locate a spare high tension lead (coil to distributor cap), long enough to reach the upper parts of the engine.
STart the car and get it warm (runs with no choke). Shut it off, pull the wire out of the coil, insert the new one, key on, brakes on, neutral, hold the end of the wire 1/2" from metal, crank with the button, and see how much spark you get, and if it's even, like, "zap-zap-zap-zap-zap".
Put it back "right" and drive it until it quits.
Do the same test, important the amount of spark throw is real close to what you had initially, and that the even "zaps" aren't "zap..............zap-zap..........zap-zap-zap" which indicates a breakdown. You pass that test, it isn't the coil.
You HAVE to change the coil first!
Joke, son, just a joke.
That said, for me, testing the coil in the field when I suspect I have a problem, and no scope, is to locate a spare high tension lead (coil to distributor cap), long enough to reach the upper parts of the engine.
STart the car and get it warm (runs with no choke). Shut it off, pull the wire out of the coil, insert the new one, key on, brakes on, neutral, hold the end of the wire 1/2" from metal, crank with the button, and see how much spark you get, and if it's even, like, "zap-zap-zap-zap-zap".
Put it back "right" and drive it until it quits.
Do the same test, important the amount of spark throw is real close to what you had initially, and that the even "zaps" aren't "zap..............zap-zap..........zap-zap-zap" which indicates a breakdown. You pass that test, it isn't the coil.
Hi Guest!
smilie in place of the real @
Pretty Please - add it to our Events forum(s) and add to the calendar! >> 
----------------------------Keoke- :laugh: