Hi folks, hope everyone is doing ok. I have a question relating to a problem with my ignition, which I will try to keep short:
1977 FHC, ACG series
I recently refitted my alternator and after doing so the car wouldn't start (it started fine before). I noticed that the ignition light in the dash was not illuminating. Checking the alternator connections I noticed the smaller of the three embedded spade lugs within the alternator multi-plug had come loose and pushed itself off the terminal and out the back of the connector, leaving just the other two lugs connected. I fixed this and the ignition light illuminated again but the car still wouldn't start. This is sort of background info regarding the below, and may or may not be relevant.
So, the car won't start and I have established that there is no HT from the coil, so obviously no spark up the king lead and onwards. In terms of voltage/earth checks, the car has 13.5v on the +ve LT coil terminal (white & yellow wire) with the ignition on, which drops down to around 9v on cranking. The white & slate wire from the -terminal of the coil reads closed circuit up to the same wire in the distributor, and the wire which feeds the tacho - which is correct, I believe. The coil itself is grounded to the suspension turret. So, I have concluded that the LT wiring is as it should be, I think.
As the LT circuit appears to be ok, I am leaning towards the coil having gone faulty, as I can't see what else it might be. The coil is brand new and a lucas model, from a reputable TR7 specialist. However, that got me thinking - "why?".
My first thought was that maybe not having the aforementioned alternator wire connected during cranking had some how fried the coil. I don't know if this would happen?
The second thought was around the ballast resistor. In truth I don't know if I have one fitted, but do understand that a ballast system needs a ballast coil and vice versa. Likewise I don't know if the coil I fitted is a ballast coil or not. Clutching at straws, I wondered if - supposing I have the wrong combination of ballast resistor and coil - the coil was ok initially and started the car, but has now burned out due to the mismatch.
Not sure if this helps the ballast theory, but in terms of wiring on the starter I have three wires - two go to the main terminal post on the solenoid and one to a smaller spade/lug terminal. On the coil I have just the two wires mentioned above (one each on the + and - terminals) and the flying wire from the loom which goes to the tacho. That's it.
Sorry, I failed to keep it short but tried my best! Any thoughts very much appreciated.
Cheers
John