badvs3vil
Active Member
Ha, I also emailed them but I didnt think their email worked so I called. Here is the answer I got back from the email.
Big_John I'm going to disagree with you in part. The sole purpose of the ballast resistor is to drop the voltage so the points don't burn. If you no longer have points you no longer need the resister.The short answer is no, you don't want to run without one. You will probably fry the coil.
The long answer is the ballast resistor limits current after the engine starts. Because of less current (amperage), the voltage will drop under load (Ohm's law). For starting, the current isn't limited, which does give full current to the coil to help with starting. Let the key off to run and the current is reduced and that helps the coil live longer.
Big_John I have to disagree with you. The sole purpose of the ballast resistor is to reduce the voltage to the points so they don't burn up.The short answer is no, you don't want to run without one. You will probably fry the coil.
The long answer is the ballast resistor limits current after the engine starts. Because of less current (amperage), the voltage will drop under load (Ohm's law). For starting, the current isn't limited, which does give full current to the coil to help with starting. Let the key off to run and the current is reduced and that helps the coil live longer.
Number one, it reduces current, not voltage. The voltage does drop because of the load, but without load the voltage doesn't drop. This is Ohm's Law... Basic electrical stuff. Google it. Effectively, under load, it does reduce voltage so many sources do say "voltage reduction".Big_John I'm going to disagree with you in part. The sole purpose of the ballast resistor is to drop the voltage so the points don't burn. If you no longer have points you no longer need the resister.
Ohm's LawI called Holley this morning and spoke to MSD. He said that the Blaster 2 is indeed a 12v coil. However, it depends on the ignitation if you need a ballast or not. He said if you have points or a Unilight that you need to have one or even 2 ballast's. He wasnt sure of Proform.
He did send me this.
View attachment 601728
Yep, there are ignition coils that don't use the ballast resistor. The claim is they have an internal resistor and don't need an addtional external resistor.I can't offer any scientific information, but I can offer some anecdotal info: I have coils on my 67 Newport and 65 NYer that say, in essence, "Does not require and external ballast resistor". So, I deleted the resistors from both cars, and 4 years on I have had no problems whatsoever.
I know I'm gonna regret posting this....
This is an older thread now, but I have some interesting info on the new ECUs that have 5 pins... The 5th pin does nothing, it's a 4-pin box with a dummy 5th pin.As I understand it, there are 5 pin versions still made. The 4 pin is "plug and play", it just doesn't have that extra pin and the extra side of the BR is just left in place. My '70 300 was wired like that when I got it and I just eliminated that part of the wiring.
The new 5 pin ECUs, so I'm told, were in response to the guys that asked where the 5th pin was on their new ECU. That may or may not be true...
The real difference in coils for our application is the primary resistance. Somewhere, there has to be a reliable reference to what coils work with the Mopar Perf ignition and its clones. IIRC, 1.5 to .7 ohms being the ones that work the best. I do know that generally speaking, the points ignition will use a 3 ohm coil. The lower the primary resistance, the more current and the better the output. The points need a higher resitance primary to keep from burrning out.
That said, we've all seen whatever coil is handy used with the Mopar electronic and they work... It's just which coil is the better choice.