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I disagree, Bill. The later XR700 (with the LED on the box) is also safe; as are the MSD units. In both cases the power portion of the unit shuts down when the engine is not turning.TR6BILL said:The Crane XR3000 is the only unit that you can leave the ignition key on without the engine running and not have the unit burn out.
TR3driver said:I disagree, Bill. The later XR700 (with the LED on the box) is also safe; as are the MSD units. In both cases the power portion of the unit shuts down when the engine is not turning.TR6BILL said:The Crane XR3000 is the only unit that you can leave the ignition key on without the engine running and not have the unit burn out.
A Pertronix used to trigger a MSD should also be safe, since the current through the Pertronix module will be much less than when it controls the coil directly.
I have also inadvertently left the Lumenition on my Stag on for several hours, with no ill effects to the ignition module. Lumenition offers no caution against this, nor does Crane (even for the early XR700).
To the best of my knowledge, only Pertronix cautions against leaving the key on.
TR6BILL said:Years ago, when I ran an early Crane XR700 on my first TR6, I burned out three units. Finally, an engineer at Crane sheepishly admitted this would happen by leaving the key on. He told me at the time that the 3000 unit was internally protected against that. They must've changed, as you said.
TR3driver said:I ran a MSD6 with points on my TR3A for many years. Had a "teething" problem a few months after initial installation, where it literally burned away the RFI suppression resistor in the cap (along with some of the cap itself), and then burned a carbon track through the coil tower. But I was able to limp home by fabricating a replacement center contact from a paper clip. Carved a non-resistor contact from the center of a flashlight battery, new cap & coil; and it ran great for many years. Module died once, but the factory sold me a 'reconditioned' replacement at a reasonable price.
I've had great experiences with MSD6/pts in two diff '50's era cars Randall. never burned any rotors or caps and the points lasted forever...changed them out at 10k when I figured the spring was tired.
I know you are a mechanic so what do you attribute the prob too...a bad box?
The Lucas distributors used on the TR2-4 use a resistor for the center contact in the distributor cap. I believe that resistor is simply incapable of handling the higher spark current caused by the MSD. It was literally burned nearly white (showing just how little carbon was actually in it).prb51 said:I've had great experiences with MSD6/pts in two diff '50's era cars Randall. never burned any rotors or caps and the points lasted forever...changed them out at 10k when I figured the spring was tired.
I know you are a mechanic so what do you attribute the prob too...a bad box?
70herald said:The XR700's with an LED are internally protected. They are the latest version of the Crane / Alison unit. the older ones were not and of course burned out like yours did. Of course Crane learned and modified the design something which Pertronix hasn't done yet.
I think there is a certain element of chance involved. For example, if the engine happens to stop with the virtual points open, then there is no current to overheat the Pertronix module. Since your battery was not run flat, I'd guess this was the case in your example.swift6 said:BTW, I realize this is anecdotal and appears not to be the general experience.
TR3driver said:I think there is a certain element of chance involved. For example, if the engine happens to stop with the virtual points open, then there is no current to overheat the Pertronix module. Since your battery was not run flat, I'd guess this was the case in your example.swift6 said:BTW, I realize this is anecdotal and appears not to be the general experience.
It probably also depends on how good the thermal connection between the module and the mounting plate is, as the mounting plate can also help dissipate the heat. I added some heat sink compound to the joint, in hopes that it would help (since I'm almost certain to leave the key on eventually).