I sort of spoke of this in another thread, but the original subject was different so I'm gonna branch of and put all the issues in here.
Basically I've got a new 5.0 roller motor I've put in the car with carb and mechanical fuel pump. I'm also running a full MSD electronic ignition system including 6AL box, Blaster 2 coil, and the correct distributor.
So right now the problem seems to be I'm not getting spark at the plugs. I checked for spark at the coil following MSD guidelines: Pulled the coil lead off the distributor, placed it 1/2" from ground, disconnected the magnetic pickup line, put the key to "on", shorted the magnetic pickup wires and got a spark off the coil lead. Good healthy spark.
But when I go to crank it I'm not seeing any spark at the plugs.
D.Hearne: You said the plugs had to be firmly grounded when checking for spark. I've always had success checking spark with the plug laying in the vicinity of a ground. Is there some other reason that wouldn't work in this case?
I went and investigated with a multimeter. I've got about 11.8 volts across the battery. The switched power 12V lead for the MSD is reading about 11.6 volts right before the MSD. Voltage drops dramatically to about 1-3 volts upon startup. I realize that it should drop because of all the juice going to the starter but is it that much? Could there be a problem here?
Basically I've got a new 5.0 roller motor I've put in the car with carb and mechanical fuel pump. I'm also running a full MSD electronic ignition system including 6AL box, Blaster 2 coil, and the correct distributor.
So right now the problem seems to be I'm not getting spark at the plugs. I checked for spark at the coil following MSD guidelines: Pulled the coil lead off the distributor, placed it 1/2" from ground, disconnected the magnetic pickup line, put the key to "on", shorted the magnetic pickup wires and got a spark off the coil lead. Good healthy spark.
But when I go to crank it I'm not seeing any spark at the plugs.
D.Hearne: You said the plugs had to be firmly grounded when checking for spark. I've always had success checking spark with the plug laying in the vicinity of a ground. Is there some other reason that wouldn't work in this case?
I went and investigated with a multimeter. I've got about 11.8 volts across the battery. The switched power 12V lead for the MSD is reading about 11.6 volts right before the MSD. Voltage drops dramatically to about 1-3 volts upon startup. I realize that it should drop because of all the juice going to the starter but is it that much? Could there be a problem here?

