1975 Ford 4000 ignition ?

   / 1975 Ford 4000 ignition ? #1  

banc123

Bronze Member
Joined
Mar 28, 2010
Messages
70
Location
Florida
I have 1975 Ford 4000 tractor. Haven't used it since November when I planted the fall plots. Went to crank it last week and all it would do is turn over, no firing. I drained the carb and put new fuel in, same results. I started with the carb, got a rebuild kit and rebuilt it. No change, same result. I learned something after I had rebuilt the carb that if you spray ether into the carb and it doesn't fire up for at least a few seconds, its not the carb

I moved on to the coil and the distributor. The distributor cap is new last year.

If I test the voltage on the + terminal and ground terminals on top of the coil I get about 8 volts.

If I leave the meter on the + terminal and use the - on the battery or the block, I get 12.75 volts.

So I'm thinking I have a bad coil and take if off.

If I put a volt meter on the + wire that I unhooked from the coil and the black wire I unhooked from the coil that runs to the distributor I get the 8 volts again. So no coil in between, just the + wire that I unhooked from the coil (it runs to the solenoid) and black wire I unhooked that runs to the distributor. about 8 volts.

Now if I leave the volt meter on the same + wire I unhooked from the coil and ground the volt meter to the - on the battery or the block, its the 12.75 volts.

Now I'm thinking maybe its not the coil maybe its getting a bad ground from the distributor or the distributor is bad.

So I tried to replicate a coil test I had read about. With the coil + wire back on the coil but wire that runs to the distributor off, I unhooked the center distributor wire that runs to the top of the coil from the distributor. I took a spark plug out and attached it to the end that normally goes to the center of the distributor. I attached a ground wire around the threads on the spark plug. According to the test, if I touch the end of the wire I attached to the base of the spark plug to the - on the battery, the spark plug should fire and throw a spark. Nothing ...zero spark. Back to thinking the coil isn't working unless I did the test wrong.

So I did something you're probably not supposed to do....trying something as a "what if" vs knowing if its the right thing or safe.

I know my + going to the coil is good, so I left it plugged in but ran a jumper from the - on the battery to the terminal on the coil that normally runs to the distributor. Now I KNOW I have a good + and - at the coil. So I try the spark plug test again with the spark plug hooked to the end of the center coil wire and a ground wire attached to the spark plug base.....drumb roll.......

Nothing, no spark.

So I put the volt meter back on the coil when KNOW its getting a good + and good - connection right to the battery. It still reads 8 volts from the coil terminal bolts, even though its direct wired to the battery. If I move the - volt meter wire to the - on the battery or the block, it goes back to 12.75 volts.

Apparently even with the coil direct to battery if you read from the coil terminals it will read 8 volts, but soon as you ground it to anything off the coil its 12.75 V

Now is when a mechanic/guru probably says, "No kidding, as the current goes through the coil and you read from the coil terminals, its going to be less" , not sure, thats my guess.

So I'm still a little stumped. I ordered a new coil anyway.

Here is the summary of what I know

1. Turns over fine, no fire at all with ether.
2. + coil wire will read 12.75 volts when grounded to anything but the terminal that has the wire that runs to the distributor. On the terminal ends of the coil, its 8 volts.
3. With the coil off and the volt meter on the + wire that runs to the solenoid and the wire (no longer attached to the coil) that runs to the distributor its 8 volts.
4. Coil terminals only read 8 volts even when wired directly to the battery.
5. If I hook up a spark plug to the end of the wire that comes from the center of the distributor and run a ground wire from the base of the plug and touch it to the - on the battery....no spark.

Any thoughts or suggestions ? Thanks
 
   / 1975 Ford 4000 ignition ?
  • Thread Starter
#3  
Thanks, I couldn't really see down into the distributor but its possible. When Pull the cap off there's a cover over the insides and I didn't pull it off, so it could be messy under it I guess.

I ordered a coil and tune up set, hopefully thats it.

Thanks.
 
   / 1975 Ford 4000 ignition ? #4  
banc123 you may also want to grab a book on kettering ignitions.. spark occurs when you break the ground after having first charged the coil.

do your test differently.

bat+ to + on the coil


center tower spark plug wire to a spark plug

wire from base threads of spark plug to bat - ( chassie ground )

now take a common lamp on/off switch.. wire - side of coil to one switch terminal, and the other switch terminal to chassie ground.. now take an ignition condensor and wire it across the 2 terminals on the switch...

throw the switch back and forth.. that's your 'points' the spark plug should spark every time the switch opens ( off position ).

btw.. you can do this test with a 12v lantern battery, the spark plug, coil, condensor and switch.. no need to involve the tractor.. :)

soundguy
 

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