How to test coils?
Posted: Mon Oct 03, 2022 7:34 pm
Is there a way to test coils to determine if they are still good or going bad or failed?
I have 3 take out coils with no clue as to their viability.
'54 M38a1 all stock. I had a misfire issue and a friend suggested I replace the condenser first.
It was a recent install in the last two years probably chicom product.
I put an old US issue condenser back in that I had removed just for GP and the problem was gone.
Two weeks later Im out putting around off roading in 100 deg heat and suddenly I get misfires again. A random put here and there that got worse. Jeep was harder to start when hot and then it made a constant putting machine gun sound near the top RPM of each gear.
Someone at our meet pulled my distributor cap off and had me crank it over and he said the bright white tiny spark in the points means my condenser is still good, that it would be yellow if it were bad. Along with the fact it ran much better after it cooled for a few hours points to the coil.
So is there any test procedure for testing coils?
I have 3 take out coils with no clue as to their viability.
'54 M38a1 all stock. I had a misfire issue and a friend suggested I replace the condenser first.
It was a recent install in the last two years probably chicom product.
I put an old US issue condenser back in that I had removed just for GP and the problem was gone.
Two weeks later Im out putting around off roading in 100 deg heat and suddenly I get misfires again. A random put here and there that got worse. Jeep was harder to start when hot and then it made a constant putting machine gun sound near the top RPM of each gear.
Someone at our meet pulled my distributor cap off and had me crank it over and he said the bright white tiny spark in the points means my condenser is still good, that it would be yellow if it were bad. Along with the fact it ran much better after it cooled for a few hours points to the coil.
So is there any test procedure for testing coils?