Good Morning,
Since my the unfortunate incident where I shorted the starter + post to the block while changing out my defective foot pedal actuated 6V starter. I have installed a new, solenoid operated 12V starter, and replaced the following with new components:
1) Negative and Positive battery cable lugs
2) Solid state distributor
3) 12V Ignition Coil
4) Ignition Switch
Items 1 thru 4 were done while I attempted to get good spark on my #1 plug with no luck. At no time, through all of these trials have I seen anything less that 11.5V on the + Coil post during cranking.
On Sunday, using bmorgil's suggestion, I was able to start the jeep when I used a jumper from the battery+ to the coil+ post. After turning it off, I removed the jumper and was unable to start or get spark. When I put the jumper back on, the jeep started. After idling for 15 minutes, I turned the jeep off, removed the jumper and it started without the jumper several times. After remounting the ignition switch into the dash, I took it out for a 30 minute drive and when I had it back in the barn, I stopped and restarted it another 5 times with no jumper. I closed the barn, went to the house and had a beer.
On Monday morning, I attempted to start the jeep with no joy. I pulled #1...no spark. Checked my coil voltage during cranking: 11.6V. I applied the jumper from the battery+ to the coil+....no spark.
Since my volt meter isn't showing me where the problem is, my current plan is to disconnect everything but the ignition circuit (e.g. lights, horn, amp meter, fuel gage, fuel pump, alternator) and redo all crimped connections in the ignition circuit on the assumption that I have a faulty connection which shows good voltage but can't carry current reliably. This includes the following cables:
1) Battery + to Amp Meter+ post
2) Amp Meter - post to Ignition Switch BAT post
3) Ignitions Switch IGN + post to Coil
4) Ignition Switch STARTER post to starter solenoid + post
Again, thanks to each of you for your patience and thoughts on this issue. I was reminded on Sunday how much I enjoy driving this old Willy's and look forward to doing it again soon.
Please let me know if any of this recap is unclear.
I agree with your faulty connection theory. It sounds to me like it works when warm but not when cold. Had an airplane do that with the charging system. Fly for a while with everything working then the charging system would just die. 10-15 minutes later it would come back. Impossible to troubleshoot like that. My fix was to rewire the airplane. The problem should be in the circuit or circuits you bypassed to get spark.
Jeff
'51 CJ3A
'47 CJ2A
I've re-terminated every connection in the ignition circuit, removed all non ignition related circuits and attempted to start the jeep with and without the jumper and still no spark. I still have 11.6V on the coil + when cranking and have probed the hot lead in the distributor to assure I'm getting voltage there (not while cranking, however).
Chris, make sure there is at least 10 volts at the coil while cranking. If there is pull the distributor. Put the points distributor back in. If you want an electronic distributor, buy the Pertronix conversion for your original distributor. There simply is no other explanation for your issue. The Pertronix will be trouble free and you can retain the original look.
Last edited by bmorgil; 05-09-2023 at 07:49 PM. Reason: Added must have volts at coil while cranknig
Thanks, bmorgil. I came to the same conclusion last night. I've been working on the old distributor this morning with the goal of getting it in and giving it a try by tomorrow. It's been a real education for me. Seems like a real simple system which could provide more diagnostic feedback than the electronic "black box". I'll let you know how it goes either way. Again, can't thank you enough for all of your help.
After putting the original (points & condenser) today, I appear to have reliable spark for now. I'll update this after a couple of days to confirm that holds. I'm working on adjusting the timing and getting my wiring buttoned up. Again, thanks to all.
Chris, it is important to verify that you have at least near 10 volts while cranking. Any less and two things can happen. The coil will not saturate and generate a spark and the ignition module will not fire. If your ground has resistance or is of insufficient size, or there is resistance in the wiring somewhere the cranking voltage at the coil will be low. The only way to verify this is to draw maximum current (crank the starter) and check the voltage drop at the coil +. It must be near 10 volts minimum or there will be no spark. All electronic distributors have a minimum firing voltage. Points are not sensitive to it but the coil is. The coil is not as sensitive as the electronic module. You could still have the root cause of your problem lurking.
Last edited by bmorgil; 05-10-2023 at 04:49 PM.
Interesting...with the points/condenser distributor I'm now getting 10.6V from the + coil post to the - battery post during cranking (with a good white spark). The electronic ignition was always showing 11.6V at the coil (but no spark). By the way, the jeep is running now, I need to wait for my son to come over this weekend to finish tuning. I need his hands, eyes and brain to keep from doing something stupid (e.g. leaving a tool laying near the positive starter terminal).
I'm really at a loss to know why the electronic distributor wasn't sparking with that voltage. Perhaps it's not as easy as poor Chinese quality control? At any rate, I'm investigating the PerTronix Electronic conversion kit you mentioned. I'm a little spooked by OMIX at this point. The OMIX distributor that wouldn't spark was brank new and had not been exposed to "the short"
I'll know this weekend if I'm officially out of the woods, but the signs are good so far. Either way, I'd really like to buy you and the other contributors a beer sometime. If you're ever in Nashville, drinks are on me
Chris