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Ol'ford nut
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I am running the stock point ignition on my car and have a Mark Ten unit I have thought about installing. I've been told it keeps points from burning. I'm looking for others opinions-
Ol'ford nutCentral Iowa
56 Vic w/292 & 4 spd.
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bergmanj
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Ol Ford Nut, I still have two of those units (the Allied Radio Knight Kit variety - virtually identical) which I have used off and on for some 40 years now and they always work great for preventing burnt points. Two things to watch-out for, though: Lube your distributor points rubbing block about every six months (I forgot about mine way back when - the rubbing block dissappeared), and some points may actually tarnish (to the status of no longer working) from having so very little current going through them that you may need to polish them once in a while. Hope this helps. Regards, JLB
55 Ford Crown Victoria Steel Top
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Speedbump
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I've used the Pertronix unit in the last two distributors for Ford engines I built, including one 52 flathead. They make them for Y's also. IMO, best $100 you will ever spend. Warren
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GREENBIRD56
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OL'Ford NUT - That type of CDI unit changes the amp load on the points considerably - makes them into a low load switch, so the contacts can last for an extremely long time. Way longer than with the convention inductive firing system. I had one on an old Ford Falcon I drove to college for several years and it finally wore the rubbing block off the point set. Its was pretty much trouble free - but was not used for making more horsepower. The older CD set-ups exchanged the amps of the conventional system for higher voltage - uses the coil as a step-up transformer. It seems to me that idle and low speed performance was improved - with the six in the Falcon - but mine was never used on a V8. The "chip" electronics of the current day version of CD iginitions makes it possible for them to have "multi-spark" capability - that I don't believe was possible in the earlier equipment.
Steve Metzger Tucson, Arizona
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DANIEL TINDER
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Speedbump (1/7/2010) I've used the Pertronix unit in the last two distributors for Ford engines I built, including one 52 flathead. They make them for Y's also. IMO, best $100 you will ever spend.
WarrenNot especially relevant to this thread, but it suddenly occurred to me that the performance of the magnetic Pertronix-type pickup, besides being independent of distributor cam wear & point-drag (no breaker spring-tension adjustment needed), might also be unaffected by bushing wear? As long as the advance mechanism was free & properly curved/setup, might the usual rebuilding due to mileage/wear be thus unnecessary?
6 VOLTS/POS. GRD. NW INDIANA
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Bob's 55
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I have a MSD ignition box that is triggered with points and as the others have stated the points last forever. But the best thing about it is that it starts much easier and runs smoother. I used to trigger it with a Pertronix but it mysteriously quit working (I may have left the key on too long while static timing the engine  ). I really didn't notice any difference between the points and Pertronix in this situation so I just left the points in.
BOB
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charliemccraney
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How stable is the timing when using the points as a trigger? In my experience so far, points never resulted in stable timing. For instance, the initial timing might vary by a half to 1 degree or so at idle. When using pertronix and now duraspark, it is very stable.
Lawrenceville, GA
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Speedbump
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Even though I take apart and inspect/clean and limit mechanical advance with a bushing, any distributors I do, you're correct that the Pertronix (or other conversion) is very tolerant of bushing wear, but stable spark/timing and zero need of regular maintenance are the best parts. It will also trigger an ignition box if one feels the need. I'm not a salesman for them but I've been through the Unilite and other conversion kits and like it when a product simply does what it's supposed to do.
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GREENBIRD56
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It always seemed to me - no direct proof as such - that the unstable timing had more to do with wear in the bushings rather than use of the points. But.......worn distributors always seemed to scatter the spark a bit more than one with "like new" clearances.
Steve Metzger Tucson, Arizona
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charliemccraney
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Bushing wear could be a cause. But I witnessed this when using points, then pertronix, then back to points, different points and condenser each time, in the same distributor. In that case everything but that which is triggering the spark is eliminated.
Lawrenceville, GA
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