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Ballast resistor and electronic ignition ?

Discussion in 'Early CJ5 and CJ6 Tech' started by ziv, Jul 20, 2010.

  1. Jul 20, 2010
    ziv

    ziv Member

    Israel
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    Mar 27, 2003
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    299
    Hello.

    In my F-134 engine:
    If i swap to electric ignition (distr.) will i need the old ballest resistor ?
    As i understand its purpose is to "save" the point life, and i wont have any points in the new distr. Right?

    Ziv
     
  2. Jul 20, 2010
    bkd

    bkd Moderator Supreme Staff Member 2022 Sponsor

    K-Town Tenn.
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    Re: Ballest resistor and electronic ignition ?

    didn't need mine when I went to electronic.....
    Jim
     
  3. Jul 20, 2010
    mortten

    mortten I can’t put my finger on it 2024 Sponsor 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    Peninsula, Ohio
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    Re: Ballest resistor and electronic ignition ?

    Which electronic distributor are you going to use? Most, if not all, need a full 12 volts thus not needing the resistor.
     
  4. Jul 20, 2010
    sparky

    sparky Sandgroper Staff Member Founder

    Perth, WA
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    Installation instructions should have that detail in them.
     
  5. Jul 20, 2010
    Walt Couch

    Walt Couch sidehill Cordele, Ga. 2024 Sponsor 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    cordele, Ga.
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    I believe Timgr is running a Motorcraft electronic ign that requires a resistor..
     
  6. Jul 20, 2010
    timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    Medford Mass USA
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    Actually I'm running a 3 ohm Pertronix coil with an external GM HEI module and Motorcraft distributor on the CJ-6. The J20 has a factory-equipment 100% Motorcraft setup, and it has a resistance wire somewhere.

    Whether you need the ballast resistor or not depends on how much current the electronic control module can sink without overheating. It does not hurt anything to add more resistance in series with coil, except that you'll reduce the spark voltage some.
     
  7. Jul 20, 2010
    Patrick

    Patrick Super Moderator Staff Member

    Los Alamos, NM
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    The ignition coil is what determines if you need a ballast resistor or not. It has nothing to do with the trigger (points, electronic)
     
  8. Jul 20, 2010
    Corveeper

    Corveeper Member

    Chanute, Kansas
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    I’m running a Mallory ignition system (magnetic trigger distributor, CDI box and coil) and without the CDI box it would still need a ballast resistor.
     
  9. Jul 20, 2010
    timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

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    Yes and no. You are correct in that you aren't supposed to exceed the current rating and voltage drop of the coil. If the coil calls for a ballast resistor, then the internal resistance is too low to keep the current within a safe range in that application. Some modules are current limiting (apparently), some are not. If you connect a low resistance coil (ie TFI) to a module that is not current limiting (ie Duraspark), you'll blow up the module (typically) before you cook the coil (as I understand it).

    So yeah, the module matters.

    Sorry if this sounds like weasel words, but I understand the electrical issues and don't know the specifics of every module.
     
  10. Jul 20, 2010
    Patrick

    Patrick Super Moderator Staff Member

    Los Alamos, NM
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    OK, in my world :D the coil is the determining factor, IE points or Pertronix don't care. ;)
     
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