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New ***** malfunctions too even though newness can also be deceiving. It can also get expensive depending on one's perception of oldness. And driving a car that's 50+ years old can present a conundrum of sorts. "Hmm, everything's old. Should I replace the front control arms this week?" Of course, you car and YMMV. Sherwood |
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As for resistance values, remember that you probably have resistor spark plugs in each hole which adds about 3000 ohms to each spark path. You only need enough resistance to mitigate any RFI (radio frequency interference) that may disrupt vehicle electronics. More resistance (including an open circuit) does nothing except reduce available/potential voltage to jump the spark gap. Sherwood |
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The symptom you describe can be caused by a failure of the insulation jacket. However, it can also happen when an open circuit develops due to a conductor failure. At that time, high voltage current seeks the least path of resistance to ground. Thus, your observance of current jumping to ground somewhere along the wire path. What happens first, the chicken or the egg; open circuit or insulation failure? Sherwood |
One more variable to add.
If you are using 3K ohm Beru connectors, they can also go bad. They have a series of resistors inside that can lose continuity. When I would test my connectors, I always would shake/tap on the connector body to see if there was a loss of continuity. Sure enough, I found several over the years that would register "infinity" ohms when vibrated. It is one more thing to check before deciding if a wire/connector combination is "good." |
Indeed, the innards of the connectors can go bad. This connector is of the machine screw thread kind - the crimped end of the plug wire is screwed into the metal threaded part of the top of the connector. This one pulled apart as I was pulling it off its spark plug - never had one grip that hard. So it has two resistors, held against eachother and the ends by the spring, with the aluminum rod in between. Lots of places for some extra resistance to develop.
The older style connector has what looks like a small wood screw sticking out. You screw the bare end of a plug wire into that screw, which contacts the center conductor of the wire. I get 2.3K ohms from one of these resistors, and can't get anything from the other, though the plug was firing just fine. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1428281188.jpg |
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