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Pertronix and Bosch GT40R
Pertronix and Bosch GT40R
can anyone tell me if the bosch GT40R can handle working with the pertronix ignitor, i got the ignition on and worked ok for a while but all my ignition system is goin to sh*t, i am wondering if the coil cant take it? if so any suggestions on the right coil to use
I have always wondered if because i have the pertronix, whether i could get a non resistor coil and ditch the resistor? As far as i'm aware the resistor is to help stop arcing between the points, but seeing as they are now no longer there.....
marin
marin
Rum injected
TD42T shorty... got some bolt on and some custom stuff.
Read about it [url=http://www.patrol4x4.com/forum/showthread.php?t=18848]here![/url]
TD42T shorty... got some bolt on and some custom stuff.
Read about it [url=http://www.patrol4x4.com/forum/showthread.php?t=18848]here![/url]
The resistor is there to drop the volts at the coil, as the coil is designed to work at a certain voltage ( eg 9 volts). If you remove the resistor from a coil that needs it then it will get too much voltage and burn out.
I've also wondered about geting the non resistor coil too (GT40 I think) but I dunno enough about why they do it that way in the first place. I thought it was somthing to do with volts available when you crank the engine.
Reminds me I need a new coil and points
Regards,
g@z.
I've also wondered about geting the non resistor coil too (GT40 I think) but I dunno enough about why they do it that way in the first place. I thought it was somthing to do with volts available when you crank the engine.
Reminds me I need a new coil and points
Regards,
g@z.
yeh the coil is fine to use ive been told, and as stated they need a resistor or they will die the 12v is just for starting they run on 9v or somethin along those lines. my dizzy cap and rotor were toast not the coil as i thought, some knuckle head before me bent the rotor arm button bit which caused the rotor button to wear into the cap and go all loose.
Hey guys,
Just so you know, the resistor is there because the coil is designed to run on about 10 volts. The resistor is actualy bypassed then the vehicle is cranking because the voltage will drop to about 10 volts when the starter motor is turning the motor over. A STD non resistor coil will not make a decent spark to start the car at 10 volts, so the coil is just designed to run on 10 volts, hence the resistor.
You could get away with a high output 12 volt coil with electronic ignition coz even at 10 volts they will still make a decent spark.
Just so you know, the resistor is there because the coil is designed to run on about 10 volts. The resistor is actualy bypassed then the vehicle is cranking because the voltage will drop to about 10 volts when the starter motor is turning the motor over. A STD non resistor coil will not make a decent spark to start the car at 10 volts, so the coil is just designed to run on 10 volts, hence the resistor.
You could get away with a high output 12 volt coil with electronic ignition coz even at 10 volts they will still make a decent spark.
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