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20 ohm scale means that your reading is somewhere between 0 and 20 ohms. 1.6 ohms sounds normal for a coil using an external ballast resistor. 2000 ohm scale means your reading is between 0 and 2000 ohms, but on that scale you wouldn't have a decimal point unless you have at least 6 digits on the meter. So I assume that you're seeing 439 ohms. If you have lots of digits, that might really be 4.39 ohms. Either of these is much too low in any case. Should be several thousand ohms.
If you mistyped and are on the 20000 ohm (20 K ohm) scale, then 4.39 is reasonable and means 4.39K. "K" just means 1000 ohms, so this is 4390 ohms which is OK.
Unfortunately, resistance readings don't entirely confirm that a coil is OK, since it could be fine at the meter's low voltage but still arc at high voltage. Best test is the ol' pull-a-hood-and-look-for-the-spark test.
If you mistyped and are on the 20000 ohm (20 K ohm) scale, then 4.39 is reasonable and means 4.39K. "K" just means 1000 ohms, so this is 4390 ohms which is OK.
Unfortunately, resistance readings don't entirely confirm that a coil is OK, since it could be fine at the meter's low voltage but still arc at high voltage. Best test is the ol' pull-a-hood-and-look-for-the-spark test.