Finally found a hood ornament for my 1959 Dodge Coronet. Thanks so much to challenger340 who had one in his collection and was kind enough to let me purchase it. My car is one step closer to being complete. Thanks so much challenger340...my car and I really appreciate it.
It's been awhile but I've made progress on the 1959 Dodge Coronet. The engine is done and installed. (Thanks to a member here named Finsinthemirror for having a good engine core for me to use!!!) All fluids, etc changed. Engine spins over great, fuel and cooling system work great. The ONE problem is I have no spark at the plugs. I've checked the battery and have 12.5v. At the resistor I have 12.3v on one side and it gets reduced to 6.3v on the other side going to the coil. At the coil I have 6.3v. When I crank the engine there is spark at the points and the rotor spins. I pulled the cable from the coil to the distributor cap and there is spark from the coil. Just nothing getting to the wires. I did install all new cap, rotor, wires and plugs. I swapped the rotor and no change. I did set the distributor at TDC watching the intake and valves close and the crank mark at about 10 degrees BTDC. The distributor was point slightly past the #1 cylinder (but the only other option was 180 degrees the other way) so thinking it should be in time. So, will try another cap. Just can't figure out where the spark is going if it's coming out of the coil into the cap and then going nowhere with the points/condensor working. Could it be grounding out in the distributor? Any help or guidance from this wonderful group would be appreciated. Here are some pictures. Thanks!!
Checking with a spark tester in line between the plug wire and the spark plug. Also put a known good plug in the end of the spark plug wire and ground to engine and no spark.
In talking with some other forum members, I'm thinking maybe the 6v after the resistor cuts the 12v down going to the coil may be to low. Should the coil be getting 9-10volts? Maybe I will try bypassing the resistor and run a lead from the battery to the coil to give it a full 12v to check. Will keep the group updated. Thanks.