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How close does the Ignition Coil wire with the bad insulation on your starter's Pull In Coil come to that other bolt head in the picture? Is it possible it is grounding out on the other case bolt which might be ground? That would kill the voltage to your coil, and might explain why your engine shuts down. If it looks like it could touch, you might want to clean up that insulation issue and see if your problem goes away.
Pretty sure that is the ground wire circled in red. Follow it to the frame and make sure it is clean and tight. What about the small wire and the one under the boot?
I cannot actually get close enough to see visually because of the awkward angle it is located and how deep in the engine bay it is but I can feel it is very close to touching. That photo is from me reaching all the way down at a really weird angle and getting a decent picture.
It looks to me as if it has melted away over time. You can see in the pic where it is curled up from heat versus cracking from age.
Yes, that is the suspect wire connection. Given the possibility it can short out, I suspect you are grounding out your ignition coil to the Starter's case thus killing your ignition power to the Dissy. That would explain why it shuts down, and why the wire looks melted. The only remaining issue is why does it take time to happen after it heats up, unless thermal expansion is how the wire and bolt head touch, or get close enough to arc.
You will want a tape with a high insulation voltage rating to prevent arcing. The insulation rating of the coil is 500v so use a tape with that as well. A good quality electrical tape should give you that, but check it to make sure.
There are also liquid sealants that are used on battery terminals that might be easy to apply as well. I hope this solves your problem. This would explain your symptoms and the physical evidence you see.
Let us know your results. This is an interesting issue.
"I have spark and fuel when the shut down occurs."During this dead time the engine will try to turn over but it won't
"I have spark and fuel when the shut down occurs."
ok a little misleading about the turn over but you corrected.
If you have fuel, compression and spark happening at correct time it will run. You said you have fuel and a freshened motor/commpresion and spark -then it can only be a timing related problem. Do you have a timing gun that you can put on it when it will not start back up?
"The engine does run great. Burns absolutely zero oil. Engine has never knocked once and it absolutely hums at 40 mph."
Trying to help when I ask what does it sounds like at 70-75 mph?
Your very much welcome if that resolves the issue, if not, we will continue to troubleshoot it. But I think our theory is solid.
Sorry to hear you ran into some initial bad apples on your question.
Well it looks like the sealant changed something as your experience is now different. What does that tell us? No way to know if you completely coated any exposed wire? Any wires frayed that might be close to that bolt? The change in experience suggests you were on to something.