At the edge of sanity with my 40… (3 Viewers)

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Good call on the walk away..

I once spent 1/2 a day installing a new front wiring harness on a 63 Vette. Had just reconnected the battery, was cleaning up and dropped a wrench that landed perfectly across both terminals…🤯⚡⚡

Spent the afternoon at the cold snack dispenser. Didn’t help the harness but it didn’t hurt it either.

Did the Snap-On survive the engagement?
Definitely needs a new trigger switch, yanked all the leads out of the gun. It would take some work but I’m sure I could rebuild it, as long as the shock forces didn’t knock anything loose internally.
I’ll probably find a cheap old one at a garage sale or pawn shop and cannibalize the parts. I looked up to see how available they were on eBay and apparently the ones with adjustable dwell are very difficult to come by.
 
I guess it wanted to spend its last days in Alaska where I got it from. Friggin car resents me for taking it away from his home!
Like a not-quite-so-evil Christine… ha
Except Christine was self repairing! :)
 
PROGRESS UPDATE
-I found a late 70s OEM carb with the vacuum advance ports from a guy in Colorado and rebuild it.
-Found a poor condition FJ60 distributor on eBay, seller said it came off a running vehicle. One cap ear is broken, as well as the hold down bracket. Jim C. actually refused to work on it because of his condition, so I figured I’ll get it running for now, and keep looking for a nicer one or at least one with a better housing.

MY QUESTIONS…
I honestly kind of forgot about needing an igniter. I have a 94 truck, but I found that since it’s not a carbureted model that igniter won’t work.
I’ve read that an MSD box will work, I think I have one buried in storage, but I also found a NAPA part number that is supposed to work (TP50) so I’m wondering if anybody has experience wiring one of those up. I found a wiring diagram, but it’s pretty complicated and involves factory parts on the Chrysler. It was designed for that I wouldn’t be incorporating.
I don’t have a factory coil either but I could purchase an aftermarket one locally, any recommendations on the proper one for my set up?
I don’t want to burn anything out using the wrong resistance coil.

Thanks again for any advice!
I’ve been working on my other projects to try and keep this rig from driving me crazy. See pics below!

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You don't need a factory coil necessarily. A coil is a coil, and while OE coils are likely to last longer, any aftermarket coil should get you up and running. You won't burn anything up by chosing the wrong coil -- aside from the coil itself, possibly. Some coils have an internal resistor, while some need an external resistor. It usually says on the can whether it needs an external resistor or not. If you don't use an external resistor with a coil that requires one, you will overheat the coil in short order, ruining it - ask me how I know! Long story short, I ordered a new coil from my local parts store, but they were unable to source the external ballast resistor. I found a resistor at a hot rod/speed shop type place nearby, I think it was about $20. The combo works great.

If I was in your shoes, this is what I'd do:
  • Install that rebuilt carb with proper gaskets and spacer
  • Find a non-damaged OE big cap distributor, or replace the damaged parts on yours. Ensure that the distributor is *fully* seated in the oil pump drive slot
  • Ditch all the electronic ignition stuff in favor of points and condenser. That way you don't need to worry about having to cobble in a non-stock igniter, etc.
  • Clean spark plugs and make sure gap is more or less correct
  • Replace plug wires if they look at all old/boots cracked etc.
  • Double-check that the plug wires goes to the correct cylinders (firing order correct?)
  • Find #1 TCD and make sure the rotor is pointing at #1 plug wire. Make sure you're on the compression stroke. Pull the valve cover if you need to, to check that the #1 intake/exhaust rocker arms are loose (valves closed)
  • Set static timing so you know you're in the ballpark
  • Check valve lash, adjust as necessary. You'll have to adjust again when the engine is at operating temperature, but checking it cold will get you close enough that it will run
I might be forgetting one or two little things, but I feel that if you baseline all of these items, it should fire. If you think that it might not be getting fuel, try dumping some down the carb while cranking. Once you have it idling, you can do other things like measure vacuum, set timing, and of course readjust valves once the engine is hot. Once you know the engine is running well, THEN you can play with electronic ignition if that suits you. For now, I feel that you could benefit from eliminating as many variables as possible, and the best way to do that is to get it back as close to the original factory setup as possible, with everything adjusted to factory spec.
 
You don't need a factory coil necessarily. A coil is a coil, and while OE coils are likely to last longer, any aftermarket coil should get you up and running. You won't burn anything up by chosing the wrong coil -- aside from the coil itself, possibly. Some coils have an internal resistor, while some need an external resistor. It usually says on the can whether it needs an external resistor or not. If you don't use an external resistor with a coil that requires one, you will overheat the coil in short order, ruining it - ask me how I know! Long story short, I ordered a new coil from my local parts store, but they were unable to source the external ballast resistor. I found a resistor at a hot rod/speed shop type place nearby, I think it was about $20. The combo works great.

If I was in your shoes, this is what I'd do:
  • Install that rebuilt carb with proper gaskets and spacer
  • Find a non-damaged OE big cap distributor, or replace the damaged parts on yours. Ensure that the distributor is *fully* seated in the oil pump drive slot
  • Ditch all the electronic ignition stuff in favor of points and condenser. That way you don't need to worry about having to cobble in a non-stock igniter, etc.
  • Clean spark plugs and make sure gap is more or less correct
  • Replace plug wires if they look at all old/boots cracked etc.
  • Double-check that the plug wires goes to the correct cylinders (firing order correct?)
  • Find #1 TCD and make sure the rotor is pointing at #1 plug wire. Make sure you're on the compression stroke. Pull the valve cover if you need to, to check that the #1 intake/exhaust rocker arms are loose (valves closed)
  • Set static timing so you know you're in the ballpark
  • Check valve lash, adjust as necessary. You'll have to adjust again when the engine is at operating temperature, but checking it cold will get you close enough that it will run
I might be forgetting one or two little things, but I feel that if you baseline all of these items, it should fire. If you think that it might not be getting fuel, try dumping some down the carb while cranking. Once you have it idling, you can do other things like measure vacuum, set timing, and of course readjust valves once the engine is hot. Once you know the engine is running well, THEN you can play with electronic ignition if that suits you. For now, I feel that you could benefit from eliminating as many variables as possible, and the best way to do that is to get it back as close to the original factory setup as possible, with everything adjusted to factory spec.
That process sounds good. I really like electronic ignition though. I ran that cheap HEI distributor for a while and it always started really nice and ran pretty well but it had a nasty wobble, I was afraid of destroying my cam or losing oil pressure. I couldn’t figure out my Holley, that’s why I replaced that with an OEM Toyota carb.
 
I’ll have to look into that option.
OEM Coil and igniters for an FJ60 are going for $250 on eBay!
I can’t bring myself to spend another chunk of change like that…
 
I don't know what I'm looking at, but I love that flat six exhaust shooting out the back
It’s a little open wheel car I am building to resemble an early to mid 60s Grand Prix car. The six flat pipes pay homage to a French GP car from the era called a Matra, they had a V12. The Matra sounds unbelievable, hoping mine sound similar.
Mine is a Kawasaki, in-line six from the 80s, a super charged it as well, with a small Eaton M45 off of a Mercedes SLK.
 
That process sounds good. I really like electronic ignition though. I ran that cheap HEI distributor for a while and it always started really nice and ran pretty well but it had a nasty wobble, I was afraid of destroying my cam or losing oil pressure. I couldn’t figure out my Holley, that’s why I replaced that with an OEM Toyota carb.
I agree, points suck. All I'm suggesting is get it running on points so that you know that it does in fact run. Baseline everything get it idling nicely, and then reinstall whatever ignition system you like, knowing that everything else has been dialed in.
 

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