ncrobb
Well-Known Member
I have a crate 408" magnum stroker from BluePrint. The car is a 1973 Road Runner. The engine came with an external coil HEI style ignition. Knowing I would not need the ballast resistor or the electronic ignition box I decided to make a new wiring harness and not cut up the factory one. Well, I did, and everything works like it should except getting 12v to the coil. I removed the electronic ignition box and ballast resistor wiring from the circuit that comes out of cavity 23 (Ignition Run) of the bulkhead and now it runs just to the alternator field, voltage regulator and the electric choke. As stated, I removed the ballast resistor, so I ran a wire from cavity 22 (Ignition Start) straight to the coil thinking it would have constant 12v on cranking and run. It does not. So, I built an overlay harness with a relay to power the coil so the HEI would have a good 12v source. I got power from the hot stud on the starter relay and used a wire branching off from the choke as a trigger for the relay. Initially I removed the wire from cavity 22 from the coil but realized I wasn't getting power during the crank/start key position. So I hooked the wire from 22 (Ignition Run) back up to the coil thinking problem solved. Nope, it will hit like its going to start and as soon as you release from the crank position the engine dies. It runs great when I jump from the hot post of the battery solenoid to the positive terminal of the coil. I have checked my relay 25 times. I have seen diagrams and read threads saying to tie the brown cavity 22 (Ignition Start) wire and the blue cavity 23 (Ignition Run) wire together and POOF the coil sees 12v and runs. This is pretty much what I have done. In my case there seems to be enough lag between the start and run position in the key switch to cut the ignition and kill the engine. Any thoughts on how to better wire this or where I can pull a 12v source to trigger the relay that is powered during start and run?