Thinking about installing Pertronix in my positive ground 61 Series II. Does anyone run this setup? Like it? Hate it?
Anyone running pertronix in their Series?
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positive?
I belive you will have to convert to negative earth to run the pertronix. I recall my instructions said that.. unless they make one special for you?
I have one in both my mercury comet, mercedes benz and had one in an International truck I used to have. I like them. Installations are easy.1968 Land Rover "Park Ranger" camper **SOLD**
1967 109 **SOLD**
NADA Dormobile #601 **SOLD**
1965 IIA 88 2.5NA Diesel
1963 Mercedes 300se
1975 Volvo C303
KJ6AQK -
+ve Earth
There is a positive earth version. I have installed both types. Don't recall exactly how it is wired but there is an extra wire. + or - they are wonderful. I think I have heard some stories of failure but AFAIK mine is still working 10 years later. Great cure for a worn out distributor too. Put one in and don't look back.
Originally posted by Linus TremaineI belive you will have to convert to negative earth to run the pertronix. I recall my instructions said that.. unless they make one special for you?
I have one in both my mercury comet, mercedes benz and had one in an International truck I used to have. I like them. Installations are easy.A Land Rover would never turn up to collect an Oscar. It'd be far too busy doing something important, somewhere, for someone."
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I ran one in my 63 that was converted to negative ground. It worked flawlessly for many years, and continues to do so for the person that bought it. I also run the Pertronix in my 68 Camaro.
Now, I have heard reports of failures of the Pertronix modules from the Camaro crowd. It is my understanding that some modules fail rather quickly, but if they don't fail quickly they will last almost forever. Still, I will be buying a spare Pertronix set-up for the Camaro just in case.Comment
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Originally posted by MomoIf you do have a Pertronix keep a spare set of points too. Some Pertronix units are crap right out of the box so your spare might be one of those.
The initial spike is due to infant mortality which is caused by bad manufacturing i.e the factory did something wrong and it was never really going to work. The flat bottom is the normal reliability range where most units are meeting their designed life and reliability but a certain small percentage may fail for a varirety of reasons but is deemed acceptable. This really describes the expected reliability of the unit. The spike at the far end is mortality due to parts wearing out and is the real indicator of the expected life of the design. For more info look up six sigma and relaibility.
Most electronic devices follow the reliability pattern described above. If you fit a Pertronix and it survives the first oil change interval you can pretty much forget it for the life of the truck.
Cheers
GregorLast edited by greenmeanie; 04-06-2008, 01:45 AM.Comment
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Has anyone seen a walk-thru of this procedure on the internet? I am looking to do the same thing to my 64 IIa, but would like a little instruction to overcome my engineering deficit.Comment
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If anyone knows the part #s i have 2 sets i would make a good deal on
cleaning a area in the shop and found two of them. I know there for a series vehicle but I have two different boxes and 2 different part #'sComment
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Hello, Petronix has a complete distributor billet with the module already built into it. I bought one in november 07 and also got the flamethrower coil for it. The coil was broke, so I got it replaced with a new one, and it will really make a difference in the engine performance.....no it will not become a dragster, but you will notice the change. For the complete distro and coil it cost $212 total for 2.25L Petrol setup. If you have problems or questions with it, the folks at Pertronics are top notch and will guide you through it.Comment
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