I washed the 80 last Saturday and also gave the radiator/condenser an good spray down with the hood closed, through the front grill.
The next day, I drove the 80 and it worked fine. On Monday morning as I go to start the 80, I get what appears to be a dead battery. I check the battery connections and tighten them up. Now I got some juice but when the 80 started it was real rough. I turned it off and tried it a few more times with the same result. Real rough, almost as if a few cylinders were not firing.
When I got back home that night, I checked the battery voltage, 12.75 V, so I knew my battery was fine. The next morning, I try and start the 80 again, and again it's real rough, so I shut here down.
Today, I decided to find out what's wrong and now I get cranking but no start. I check the fusible links and from visible inspection they look fine, although cracked and old. I also checked for fuel and spark. My spark test showed no spark and my fuel test is positive.
In doing the spark test, I removed spark plug #1 with wire. I was solo, so I needed an extension to be able to see the action. So I connected some wire to the threading on the spark plug and connected the other end of the wire at the negative end of the battery. Is there anything wrong with this method?
Is there any way to bypass the fusible links temporarily, i.e., can I swap in wire for them as a test?
I'll redo the spark test tomorrow, but I'll use the wire from the coil instead.
Any suggestions?
The next day, I drove the 80 and it worked fine. On Monday morning as I go to start the 80, I get what appears to be a dead battery. I check the battery connections and tighten them up. Now I got some juice but when the 80 started it was real rough. I turned it off and tried it a few more times with the same result. Real rough, almost as if a few cylinders were not firing.
When I got back home that night, I checked the battery voltage, 12.75 V, so I knew my battery was fine. The next morning, I try and start the 80 again, and again it's real rough, so I shut here down.
Today, I decided to find out what's wrong and now I get cranking but no start. I check the fusible links and from visible inspection they look fine, although cracked and old. I also checked for fuel and spark. My spark test showed no spark and my fuel test is positive.
In doing the spark test, I removed spark plug #1 with wire. I was solo, so I needed an extension to be able to see the action. So I connected some wire to the threading on the spark plug and connected the other end of the wire at the negative end of the battery. Is there anything wrong with this method?
Is there any way to bypass the fusible links temporarily, i.e., can I swap in wire for them as a test?
I'll redo the spark test tomorrow, but I'll use the wire from the coil instead.
Any suggestions?