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Old Henry 10-21-2023 11:24 AM

47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Prior to starting my 10,000 mile maintenance Old Henry was running fine. I replaced all of the sparkplugs and was replacing the distributor contact points when I discovered that I could not properly gap the points because the peaks on the distributor cam were worn down too much. So, I ordered a remanufactured distributor from Southside Obsolete that looked like new when it arrived. Cam peaks nice and sharp. Since the remanufacture was some time ago I replaced the points with new ones and was able to properly gap them. After installing the new distributor the engine worked even better than before . . . for one short errand. Then it started skipping beats and fairly quickly was skipping a lot - missing cylinders. I put a timing light on the coil high tension wire and the spark was very inconsistent. I suspected possible problem with the new distributor rotor I'd installed so removed the distributor cap and examined it for any damage to it or the rotor. No damage to cap nor rotor. I then suspected the old condenser/capacitor I'd had on for a long time. Removed it and checked it. Still perfect but replaced it with another perfect one. Didn't help. I then took a short drive with the timing light on the coil wire shining in my eyes while I drove. It has smoothed out but some cylinders were still missing. Back at the garage the spark at the coil wire was smooth but at the spark plugs several were very intermittent. I suspected defective wires so last night, after dark, I ran the engine in total darkness to see if I could see any sparks from any wires. I saw none but saw some slight spark leakage from the base of the spark plugs to the block. Took another drive this morning hoping for a miraculous recovery. None. Several cylinders still not firing. It seems clearly an ignition problem but I'm bewildered.

What have I missed?

Any ideas of what else to try?

Any help greatly appreciated. Old Henry is still my daily driver.

Ggmac 10-21-2023 01:07 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Thinking , you should not have spark from base of plug to block . Either the blug isn’t completely tightened and grounded or the plug is bad and the spark is following the path of least resistance, the outside of the plug ? I’ve never seen that happen .
Still thinking , good one .

Lawrie 10-21-2023 03:17 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Craig,
I always have a spare set up distributor in the 33 .
You should get another distributor from some where and try that, some time the problems take a while to sort.
I would fit new spark plugs ,that is an easy thing.
Try another cap, and rotor.
change the condenser ,
put new fuel in
One thing I found on one of my misfire problems was the little brass straps that connect the points to the round low tension contact were bent out of shape and one was shorting out on the steel part the points spring screw goes into.
Lawrie

TJ 10-21-2023 03:50 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

I suspect it's the condenser. Recently had an experience with a Chevrolet distributor and it
had some of the same symptoms. Changed the condenser and problem solved.

JayChicago 10-21-2023 08:16 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

"saw some slight spark leakage from the base of the spark plugs to the block"

Is the gap on the plugs too large? I think should be about .025 for our 6 volt cars. Out-of-the-box plugs are usually much larger gap.

Old Henry 10-23-2023 03:03 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lawrie (Post 2264266)
Craig,
I always have a spare set up distributor in the 33 .
You should get another distributor from some where and try that, some time the problems take a while to sort.
I would fit new spark plugs ,that is an easy thing.
Try another cap, and rotor.
change the condenser ,
put new fuel in
One thing I found on one of my misfire problems was the little brass straps that connect the points to the round low tension contact were bent out of shape and one was shorting out on the steel part the points spring screw goes into.
Lawrie

Thanks for you insights.

I did replace the sparkplugs checking the gap on all first.
I have just ordered new distributor caps (inner and outer) boots and wires.
I did replace the condenser. Didn't help.
I even checked those little brass straps you mention when I was installing the new distributor and bent them away to make sure they didn't touch ground.

Old Henry 10-23-2023 03:03 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by TJ (Post 2264270)
I suspect it's the condenser. Recently had an experience with a Chevrolet distributor and it
had some of the same symptoms. Changed the condenser and problem solved.

Yeah, I've solved ignition problems in the past by replacing the condenser so I tried that first. Didn't help.

Old Henry 10-23-2023 03:05 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by JayChicago (Post 2264309)
"saw some slight spark leakage from the base of the spark plugs to the block"

Is the gap on the plugs too large? I think should be about .025 for our 6 volt cars. Out-of-the-box plugs are usually much larger gap.

I checked the gap on the new plugs as I installed them. They were all correct.

The "glow" around the base of the plugs is, indeed, a mystery I don't understand.

Old Henry 10-23-2023 03:09 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Just to make sure the problem wasn't in the new plugs, I switched the plugs from the cylinders that were firing with the ones that weren't. The problem stayed with the cylinders, not the plugs. So, they're all OK.

Because the distributor was creating reliable spark from the coil but the sparks weren't making it to some of the plugs, I decided to bite the bullet and replace all wires, distributor caps (inner and outer), and boots even though I could not see any sparks in the dark from the wires. Hope it fixes the problem. All of those new parts ain't cheap.

Thanks to all who made an effort to consider and advise.

Seth Swoboda 10-23-2023 03:10 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Why not send your new distributor so someone like Michael Driskell to time and check out on the distributor tester? When you get it back it will be timed and ready to bolt on.

Old Henry 10-23-2023 03:12 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by Seth Swoboda (Post 2264643)
Why not send your new distributor so someone like Michael Driskell to time and check out on the distributor tester? When you get it back it will be timed and ready to bolt on.

I will probably do that very thing while waiting for all of the wiring parts to come.
What is Michael Driskell's contact information please.

Seth Swoboda 10-23-2023 03:58 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by Old Henry (Post 2264645)
I will probably do that very thing while waiting for all of the wiring parts to come.
What is Michael Driskell's contact information please.

www.thirdgenauto.com

844-327-5988

When you get it back, bolt it on, have fun.

Ggmac 10-23-2023 06:49 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

This spark plug glow at the base is bugging me . If its still together, I have a simple test you could try . Take a jumper leade and attach to the base of the spark plug (while its in the cyl head and ready to run ) take that leade and attach the other end from the plug base to a solid ground on the motor . What I’m trying to do is eliminate the possibility of the plug NOT BEING GROUNDED when installed in the cyl head . Never had nor heard of this situation, but also never had a glow or spark from plug base to ctl head either .
Just a way to eliminate the potential of it being not grounded. If the cyl starts to fire , we’re on to something.

Brian 10-23-2023 07:19 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

St Elmos fire? You're not, by chance running resistor type plugs are you Craig?

pistonbroke 10-23-2023 07:40 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

The glow around the plug base is an odd one for sure, but I'm going with too much resistance in the plug wires. If they are carbon fiber they may have fractured when you did your tune up. Not leaking anywhere just not passing the amount of current if any needed. Just my two cents, Tim

Seth Swoboda 10-24-2023 08:31 AM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

If you have carbon fiber plug wires, remove them for the original type plug wires. A second benefit of changing to original is that carbon fiber plug wires on these cars just look ugly.

35fordtn 10-24-2023 10:04 AM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

If its a old Reman, the point contact plunger could be froze. Common issue. Also if you replaced the points and used anything except NEW standard FD6770 or Echlin CS47, plan to replace the points. NOS points and other brand points have weak spring tension. Send it in if you need and we can throw it on a Sun Machine.

Old Henry 10-24-2023 10:55 AM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brian (Post 2264693)
St Elmos fire? You're not, by chance running resistor type plugs are you Craig?

Quote:

Originally Posted by pistonbroke (Post 2264694)
The glow around the plug base is an odd one for sure, but I'm going with too much resistance in the plug wires. If they are carbon fiber they may have fractured when you did your tune up. Not leaking anywhere just not passing the amount of current if any needed. Just my two cents, Tim

Quote:

Originally Posted by Seth Swoboda (Post 2264793)
If you have carbon fiber plug wires, remove them for the original type plug wires. A second benefit of changing to original is that carbon fiber plug wires on these cars just look ugly.

The sparkplug wires I've been using are exact reproductions of the originals with copper cores the same as the ones I just ordered here: https://cwmoss.com/products/spark-pl...e-sets-1946-48

Old Henry 10-24-2023 11:03 AM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by 35fordtn (Post 2264814)
If its a old Reman, the point contact plunger could be froze. Common issue. Also if you replaced the points and used anything except NEW standard FD6770 or Echlin CS47, plan to replace the points. NOS points and other brand points have weak spring tension. Send it in if you need and we can throw it on a Sun Machine.

I'm sending the distributor to Michael Driskell today to get checked out. I did replace the points with new ones from NAPA that have always worked well for me but it doesn't hurt, as long as I'm replacing virtually the whole ignitions system, to get it thoroughly tested.

corvette8n 10-24-2023 05:10 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Professionally fixed and tested it the way to go, I sent mine to CharlieNY and found out the shaft was bent. After being repaired I only had to bolt it on and drive it.

Bored&Stroked 10-24-2023 08:03 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

One of the challenges can be that distributor machines don't test anything to do with the secondary side of the equation - so while the distributor may "spin up" just fine on the machine, when you put the cap, rotor, wires and plugs in the engine, it may leak voltage to strange places. Due to this, on my distributor machine I have a custom setup to test the engine ignition system --> coil(s), cap, wires and plugs.

This is particularly important on the ole' Harman Collins dual-coils with the yellow mid-plate. Those mid-plates can leak secondary spark/voltage all over the place - the problem is quite typical. The symptom is that 4 cylinders will run fine and 4 will either not run, or have terribly intermittent sparks and dropped cylinders.

Here you can see "Frankenstein's Tester" in action: LOL

https://youtu.be/3xduaVyzx10

cas3 10-24-2023 10:30 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Thats a cool machine Dale! Takes the guess work out of the equation for sure.

ford38v8 10-24-2023 11:12 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Now, that's a work of art!

Lawrie 10-25-2023 02:07 AM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Man I like that, I have a home made distributor set up machine, but I only use plugs with a very wide gap,I think I will make a setup like that for extending the gap.
I set up all. my V8 distributors on it, and in this last week a pile of my model A ones with a vac advance,
it is very easy to set up and alter the advance amount and curve,
My machine is not as sanitised as your one.but sure does a great job.
Lawrie

Lawrie 10-25-2023 02:24 AM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

2 Attachment(s)
A couple of pictures for my post above

petehoovie 10-25-2023 11:10 AM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lawrie (Post 2265017)
A couple of pictures for my post above

https://www.fordbarn.com/forum/attac...2&d=1698218571

https://www.fordbarn.com/forum/attac...3&d=1698218644

Old Henry 11-04-2023 11:56 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Verdict (as us legal beagles are want to say): It appears to be the condenser that was guilty.

To refresh your memory, I had purchased a remanufactured distributor from Southside Obsoletes, replaced the old points, and put in my old condenser that still tested .35 mfds. Then I had all kinds of cylinders miss-firing. It seemed that the spark coming out of the coil was steady but was not making it to all of the cylinders. So, I figured it was the sparkplug wires and ordered all new ones along with new boots and both outer and inner distributor caps to replace. While waiting for those to come I sent the distributor to Michael Driskell to check out to make sure it wasn't the problem. All he found was that my correct gaps of the points did not make the dwell correct so adjusted that and said my condenser was bad even though it had tested .35 mfds and replaced that and returned the distributor to me. In the mean time all other parts had come to replace but I waited until I got the distributor back to put in and see if it fixed the problem without having to replace all of the other stuff. To my great and pleasant surprise, it did and I didn't have to replace the rest.

I pondered on the question I asked myself why the new condenser that only tested at .31 mfds (.35 being optimal) worked better than my old one that tested optimally. I concluded that there is more to the adequacy of a condenser than just its capacitance. Over time, the paper and foil that it's made of deteriorates and ceases working even though its capacitance tests optimally. (Even though that seemed like a new idea to me, it is more likely something I knew and forgot.)

So, lesson learned: Always replace the condenser whenever replacing the points, even if their capacitance still seems correct.

corvette8n 11-05-2023 07:01 AM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Glad you got it fixed, don’t forget to carry a few good condensers with you.

35fordtn 11-05-2023 10:32 AM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Old Henry glad you are up and running.

Your distributor had 42 degrees of dwell and a bad condenser, with either one of the two IÂ’m surprised it ran. Testing just the mfdÂ’s of a condenser is not a true test. We heat them to 160 degrees and test the mfdÂ’s and the leakage as thatÂ’s the typical failure. Your issue was the leakage, it wouldnÂ’t hold a charge for more and than a millisecond. A early ford really can run fine on .20-.45 mfdÂ’s. I think ford used .36 since some vehicles like busses and truck sat idling a lot where the higher mfd helps from burning points at idling for long periods.

Ps the new condenser is a standard fd72 and I have never after using and selling well over 400 of them have ever seen one go bad

Old Henry 11-05-2023 01:36 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

All of my life the routine was to replace points and condenser together until a few years ago when I read an article (that I can't find right now) about condensers that told how too high or too low mfds would cause pitting and peaking of the points, too high one way, too low the other, and that once a condenser was found that did not pit and peak the points to keep it as they are rare. So I did. For years now I've never seen any pit or peak on any of the points I've replaced so have just kept the same condenser until now that something worse than pitting and peaking occurred. I'll go back to my routine of replacing the condenser with the points every time and get the points from NAPA the same as I get the points and rotor even though I may end up with some points pitting and peaking.

Old Henry 12-06-2023 06:54 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

3 Attachment(s)
The sad saga continues . . .

Unfortunately, the new condenser was not the "silver bullet" that would kill my ignition problem nor solve the mystery. It only helped for about a day when the same old problem returned - skipping beats under load.

I thought maybe the coil. The impedance of the high tension coil was only 6,440 ohms, not the 10-11,000 ohm it should be, but I pulled off the high tension wire to the distributor and plugged in a short one and watched the spark at the end near a head bolt. The spark was strong and consistent - never skipping a beat so I thought it must be OK.

Since I had already replaced all spark plugs and distributor, all that was left were the spark plug wires and distributor cap. So, I ordered whose and knuckled down to change them when they arrived.

Removing the old wire conduits and the cap was the first time I had been able to inspect the cap. It looked like the attached photo so I thought for sure it must be the problem and replacing it would solve my problem. Again, as soon as I got all of that replaced I tried the engine, drove the car around, and it seemed to have fixed the problem - for about a day. UGHH!

When the old problem of stumbling under load returned I turned to examination of the spark plugs I'd just put in. Oddly enough, the bracket on #2 was smashed right down to the tip without any gap at all. That would seem to be a problem. I gapped it properly and checked all other plugs. They were all gapped correctly but #1 had black moist soot on it. The plug fires OK so I hope that's not the problem

I hoped fixing the plug would fix the problem and tested it by climbing a short very steep hill. I had full power with all cylinders firing. So, we decided to do a little 350 mile overnight road trip the next day.

As soon as we set out the same old problem returned - stumbling under load but otherwise fairly smooth on level high speed. Needless to say, the 172 miles we drove that afternoon was not as relaxing as usual with the engine stumbling most of the way.

I hoped it was a fuel problem, not ignition, so next morning before heading home I hooked up my timing light, clamped the sensor to the coil high tension wire and duct taped the light to my cowl so I could watch the light and know what was going on with the spark while we went down the road. (See attached photo) Unfortunately, the stumbling showed in the light flashes - more when under load so it's still an ignition problem.

I don't know what else to do.

Any ideas?

JayChicago 12-06-2023 08:51 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Have you tried a different coil? My understanding is that coils (like condensers) will often work fine at first, but then start to fail when they get warm from usage. So looking at spark output in the garage may not tell you how it will perform later.

And what about that plug you found with tip bent closed? That's curious! Have you pulled that plug to see what it looks like now?

petehoovie 12-06-2023 09:14 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by Old Henry (Post 2274813)
The sad saga continues . . .

Unfortunately, the new condenser was not the "silver bullet" that would kill my ignition problem nor solve the mystery. It only helped for about a day when the same old problem returned - skipping beats under load.

I thought maybe the coil. The impedance of the high tension coil was only 6,440 ohms, not the 10-11,000 ohm it should be, but I pulled off the high tension wire to the distributor and plugged in a short one and watched the spark at the end near a head bolt. The spark was strong and consistent - never skipping a beat so I thought it must be OK.

Since I had already replaced all spark plugs and distributor, all that was left were the spark plug wires and distributor cap. So, I ordered whose and knuckled down to change them when they arrived.

Removing the old wire conduits and the cap was the first time I had been able to inspect the cap. It looked like the attached photo so I thought for sure it must be the problem and replacing it would solve my problem. Again, as soon as I got all of that replaced I tried the engine, drove the car around, and it seemed to have fixed the problem - for about a day. UGHH!

When the old problem of stumbling under load returned I turned to examination of the spark plugs I'd just put in. Oddly enough, the bracket on #2 was smashed right down to the tip without any gap at all. That would seem to be a problem. I gapped it properly and checked all other plugs. They were all gapped correctly but #1 had black moist soot on it. The plug fires OK so I hope that's not the problem

I hoped fixing the plug would fix the problem and tested it by climbing a short very steep hill. I had full power with all cylinders firing. So, we decided to do a little 350 mile overnight road trip the next day.

As soon as we set out the same old problem returned - stumbling under load but otherwise fairly smooth on level high speed. Needless to say, the 172 miles we drove that afternoon was not as relaxing as usual with the engine stumbling most of the way.

I hoped it was a fuel problem, not ignition, so next morning before heading home I hooked up my timing light, clamped the sensor to the coil high tension wire and duct taped the light to my cowl so I could watch the light and know what was going on with the spark while we went down the road. (See attached photo) Unfortunately, the stumbling showed in the light flashes - more when under load so it's still an ignition problem.

I don't know what else to do.

Any ideas?

https://www.fordbarn.com/forum/attac...9&d=1701906573

https://www.fordbarn.com/forum/attac...1&d=1701906573

Old Henry 12-06-2023 09:21 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by JayChicago (Post 2274841)
Have you tried a different coil? My understanding is that coils (like condensers) will often work fine at first, but then start to fail when they get warm from usage. So looking at spark output in the garage may not tell you how it will perform later.

And what about that plug you found with tip bent closed? That's curious! Have you pulled that plug to see what it looks like now?

I thought I had another coil to try but couldn't find it. I may have to buy another just to see.

The straightened plug is fine. I just checked it.

Terry,OH 12-07-2023 08:42 AM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Both the coil and the ignition condenser can fail after heat builds up and yet, when cold, can work properly. If you have had your original Ford coil rebuilt by Skip Haney, I would suggest it is most likely good. Who manufactured your plugs and what number are the plugs? Does your engine have a heavy battery ground cable bolted to one of the head studs? Which cylinders are not firing correctly?How do you explain the plug electrode being bent when you checked plug gap before installing?

deuce_roadster 12-07-2023 09:51 AM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

I would guess that either the reach of the plugs is too long or there is enough carbon built up to hit the ground strap on the plug. How many miles are on this engine? What make and plug number are we talking about? I would certainly replace that cap and not write anything inside of it. I would also double check the ground of the engine to insure it was clean and tight clear to the battery. If loose and dirty, it might fail as the engine heats up.
An old timer once told me that all electrical troubleshooting begins with and at the battery.
Have you used a jumper to eliminate the resistor when the poor running is happening? It could cause problems too as well as the ignition switch itself.

Seth Swoboda 12-07-2023 09:52 AM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

When you say it stumbles under load, it's when you are hard on the accelerator pedal? How do you know you don't have a problem with your accelerator pump?

47topless 12-07-2023 09:59 AM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

You could just buy one of those Blue Streak (Flame?) tube coils at NAPA or O'Reilly, depending on your system, with or without built-in resistor, and test that. They are very inexpensive, and you would then have an emergency spare.

Old Henry 12-07-2023 10:11 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by deuce_roadster (Post 2274915)
Have you used a jumper to eliminate the resistor when the poor running is happening? It could cause problems too as well as the ignition switch itself.

Now here's something really weird.

I just connected a jumper wire from the battery to the coil, bypassing the resistor and all wiring through the ignition switch. I had actually done that once on my trip to see if it helped. Both times it actually made the problem MUCH WORSE. I could hardly climb the hill in front of our house.

Why is that? Can't figure that one.

Old Henry 12-07-2023 10:16 PM

Re: 47 V8 ignition mystery
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by Terry,OH (Post 2274894)
Who manufactured your plugs and what number are the plugs?

Quote:

Originally Posted by deuce_roadster (Post 2274915)
What make and plug number are we talking about?

Spark plugs are brand new Autolite 216 just installed. Same as I've used for years.


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