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Re:Scout 800 points questions-/-Pertronics conversion
John,
I, too, did the Pertronix conversion. I got mine From
Northern Auto Parts <http://www.naparts.com>, and the price was
$59.99 and the shipping/handling was around $10. I picked up a
MSD blaster 2 coil since a local speed shop guy said it would be
less expensive for the same functionality (and I got one that
was a kit that included the ballast resistor and heavy duty coil
wire boots). I've got a Holley distributor, so I got Pertronix
kit #1481.
To install it, bump the engine over until the rotor is pointed
at the #1 terminal of the dist cap. There will be a small ring
in the kit with a diameter about the size of a half dollar.
Once the points are out of the dist., slip the ring over the
shaft in the dist and just make a reference mark on the ring so
you know where the first magnet lines up. take the ring back
off and you'll notice a seam about 1mm from the top surface, and
you can use a thin bladed knife/fingernail to pry it up to
reveal the magnets inside. Starting from your reference mark,
remove every other magent so that only four remain. The magnets
are *VERY* attracted to one another and love to fly out of their
holes, so you may have to get creative on how you place your
fingers during all this. Place the cap back on the ring and
continue with the instructions supplied in the kit.
The funny thing I ran into, was that after installing it, it
would only run on two cylinders, and a timing light showed that
the other two weren't getting spark. No fouling was evident,
and the wires/cap/rotor were only a couple months old. Air gap
for the sensor/ring was fine. I pulled the ring off and put it
back on rotated 90 degrees ahead of where it was, working
cylinders stopped firing, but the non-working ones fired. More
checking of clearances revealed nothing. I thought maybe a
magnet got turned to where it was opposite what it should be, so
I started flipping the one for the non-working cylinders around
so that a different face was pointed outward and finally found a
combination that worked for all four cylinders. Mind you, I had
not yet gotten the MSD coil, but I had two stock coils and both
had the same results during the troubleshooting phase. I don't
know that a new coil would have helped or not. I timed it at
about 4 degrees BTDC as an initial test and the mark stayed rock
steady on each blink of the strobe.
A couple weeks passed before I got the MSD coil and even
though my setup didn't have a ballast resistor originally, it
wouldn't start until I installed the supplied ballast as per the
instructions with the coil. I've since gapped the plugs to .035
and am still experimenting on the optimum setup for timing/gap.
Sorry about the length here, but if it happened to me, it
might be useful to you. Feel free to ask for more info,
Myron
------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Myron Ware Senior Prog/Analyst, CNE | NASA Langley Research Center
Email c.m.ware@domain.elided | Hampton, Va 23681
http://cnb-www.larc.nasa.gov/~ware/cmw-home.html (work) or
http://www.geocities.com/Colosseum/1370 (non-work)
Word for the day: Bagpipes (n): an octopus wearing a kilt.
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