Hey Guest!
smilie in place of the real @
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I wondered about that, guess I should have spoken up. As a temporary measure, you can use the nut & washer on the carbon core wires. Put the center conductor through the hole and bend it to the side while you stuff the wire and washer into the coil tower, then screw the nut down on top of it. Not a long term fix, but should last a few thousand miles anyway.
Or call around, and see if a local auto parts store has the coil you need in stock. Any place that caters to the vintage VW/dune buggy crowd should have one. Probably not O'Reillys or Autozone, but try all the independent shops.
Or, if you have Amazon Prime, it appears you can get free 2 day shipping on a nice Pertronix coil
https://www.amazon.com/PerTronix-40...d=1462417679&sr=8-5&keywords=ignition+coil+vw
Yeah, I decided last night to just replace the coil.

Art - out of curiosity - if he's just trying to trouble shoot his non start problem, couldn't he use any good 12v ignition coil, regardless of resistance? Not permanently - just for a couple of minutes to test his system, then eventually get the correct coil for his setup.
I don't think we know what modifications, including negative vs positive ground, his car has.
Tom M.
So how do I know which one to get? Can I just get the ballasted one? ...
What you want is the NON- ballasted coil. It should measure about 3 ohms across the two small terminal. You could use a ballasted coil (1½ ohms), but then you would also need a ballast resistor to put in series between the ignition and the coil. No sense in complicating the issue, just get one that doesn't require a ballast resistor.