Profile Picture

Electric choke

Posted By ejstith 15 Years Ago
You don't have permission to rate!
Author
Message
ejstith
Posted 15 Years Ago
View Quick Profile
Supercharged

Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)

Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 11 Years Ago
Posts: 494, Visits: 1.0K
OK, I've seen on here where you shouldn't connect the choke to the + side of the coil. I had mine hooked that way for 3 years and never had a problem (I thought). After I discovered that bad brand new Mallory coil I thought maybe having the choke hooked up to it may have contributed to it's demise so after I put a new MSD coil & resistor I wired the choke directly to the battery. Now my battery went totally dead and the only difference is the choke hooked to it. Question is, how is y'alls choke wired up?

Doing Fords for 45 years. '56 Customline Victoria

E.J. in Havana FL
Hoosier Hurricane
Posted 15 Years Ago
View Quick Profile
Supercharged

Supercharged (5.0K reputation)Supercharged (5.0K reputation)Supercharged (5.0K reputation)Supercharged (5.0K reputation)Supercharged (5.0K reputation)Supercharged (5.0K reputation)Supercharged (5.0K reputation)Supercharged (5.0K reputation)Supercharged (5.0K reputation)

Group: Moderators
Last Active: Yesterday
Posts: 3.7K, Visits: 322.9K
EJ:

If you hook the choke directly to the battery, it will remain heated, keeping the choke "off" until the battery runs down.  Run a wire from the "ign" terminal of the ignition switch.

John - "The Hoosier Hurricane"
http://www.y-blocksforever.com/avatars/johnf.jpg

ejstith
Posted 15 Years Ago
View Quick Profile
Supercharged

Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)

Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 11 Years Ago
Posts: 494, Visits: 1.0K
John, wouldn't that be the same as running it to the + side of the resistor where the wire comes from the ignition switch?

Doing Fords for 45 years. '56 Customline Victoria

E.J. in Havana FL
rick55
Posted 15 Years Ago
View Quick Profile
Supercharged

Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)

Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 5 Years Ago
Posts: 550, Visits: 4.4K
John, wouldn't that be the same as running it to the + side of the resistor where the wire comes from the ignition switch?



It doesn't matter where you connect a load to the +ve battery or ignition circuit (when it is switched on) - it is all essentially the same as connecting it to the +ve of the coil (in a car with no ballast resistor). You need to connect it to the ignition circuit as this is the only circuit that is live when the ignition is on. If you connect it directly to the battery it will flatten the battery as it will become a continual load and drain the battery, if you connect it to the accessory terminal of the ignition switch it will remain on when you have accessories on.

If you had no problem with it connected to the coil - so long as you are not running a ballast resistor - connect it back up to where you had it before.

The possible problem with it connected to the coil is it may overload the wiring to the coil though I doubt this will be a problem.

Regards

Rick - West Australia
Do Y Blocks Downunder run upside down? Gravity Sucks!!
ejstith
Posted 15 Years Ago
View Quick Profile
Supercharged

Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)Supercharged (567 reputation)

Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 11 Years Ago
Posts: 494, Visits: 1.0K
Rick, I have a ballast resistor now so I was assuming I could hook the choke wire to the same post on the resistor where the wire comes from the ignition switch. (Basically so I wouldn't have to run a wire through the firewall etc).

Doing Fords for 45 years. '56 Customline Victoria

E.J. in Havana FL
Talkwrench
Posted 15 Years Ago
View Quick Profile
Supercharged

Supercharged (1.6K reputation)Supercharged (1.6K reputation)Supercharged (1.6K reputation)Supercharged (1.6K reputation)Supercharged (1.6K reputation)Supercharged (1.6K reputation)Supercharged (1.6K reputation)Supercharged (1.6K reputation)Supercharged (1.6K reputation)

Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 4 Years Ago
Posts: 898, Visits: 23.2K
Yes I am looking at this Rick...Tongue

http://forums.y-blocksforever.com/Uploads/Images/02c74785-3ce2-4b80-a66c-f31f.jpg

"Came too close to dying to stop living now!"
oldcarmark
Posted 15 Years Ago
View Quick Profile
Supercharged

Supercharged (6.1K reputation)Supercharged (6.1K reputation)Supercharged (6.1K reputation)Supercharged (6.1K reputation)Supercharged (6.1K reputation)Supercharged (6.1K reputation)Supercharged (6.1K reputation)Supercharged (6.1K reputation)Supercharged (6.1K reputation)

Group: Forum Members
Last Active: Last Month
Posts: 3.7K, Visits: 32.6K
Rick-If you turn the key to the left-accessories position with motor off it would not feed the electric choke if wired correctly to the ignition switch.The choke power wire should go on the switch terminal which is "live" with the key turned to the first position right(where it is with motor running).I ran a dedicated wire from the ignition switch to the choke with an inline fuse near the choke which can be removed to "unpower" the electric choke if required.If you hook it to the ballast resistor you will not get full voltage required for the ignition system-as I understand it.Its not a lot of work to run a dedicated line from the ignition switch to the choke.This is the proper way to wire it without interfering with other circuits.

http://forums.y-blocksforever.com/Uploads/Images/a82cee8f-be33-4d66-b65d-fcd8.jpg  http://forums.y-blocksforever.com/uploads/images/339ed844-0bc3-4c73-8368-5dd3.jpg
Joe 5bird7
Posted 15 Years Ago
View Quick Profile
Supercharged

Supercharged (112 reputation)Supercharged (112 reputation)Supercharged (112 reputation)Supercharged (112 reputation)Supercharged (112 reputation)Supercharged (112 reputation)Supercharged (112 reputation)Supercharged (112 reputation)Supercharged (112 reputation)

Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 4 Years Ago
Posts: 67, Visits: 2.8K
My car has overdrive so hooking the choke wire up to the overdrive relay on the fire wall under the hood was most convenient.  That connection is "hot" only when the ignition switch is in the "on" position so everything works as it should.
rick55
Posted 15 Years Ago
View Quick Profile
Supercharged

Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)

Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 5 Years Ago
Posts: 550, Visits: 4.4K
Hook the choke up to the ignition side of the ballast resistor,not the side going to the coil and it will be fine. This side of the resistor is the 12volt feed.The choke will not draw a lot of power so the ignition circuit will handle it. You could hook an online fuse on it from the ballast resistor if you feel the need. It won't hurt. Doing it this way is probably the neatest and won't need another wire coming from the ignition switch.

Regards

Rick - West Australia
Do Y Blocks Downunder run upside down? Gravity Sucks!!
rick55
Posted 15 Years Ago
View Quick Profile
Supercharged

Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)Supercharged (658 reputation)

Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 5 Years Ago
Posts: 550, Visits: 4.4K
Olcarmark - the accessory position terminal is live when the ignition is on and when the key is turned to the left also. I had a car once where someone wired the gauges to the accessory post of the ignition switch and the gauges were on in either position.

It was a pain in the butt til I got around to changing it.

Regards

Rick

Rick - West Australia
Do Y Blocks Downunder run upside down? Gravity Sucks!!


Reading This Topic


Site Meter