No spark on a 73 cutlass supreme! help!
No spark on a 73 cutlass supreme! help!
hey i have a all original 1973 cutlass supreme with a 4 barrel rocket 350 with 54,xxx miles and the only thing that is done to it and has been on it for 6 years is a msd 6a box. I tried to start it up about a week ago and no go and the day before that it ran fine. so over night it randomly lost spark? wtf? so for the last week ive been trying to find spark and cant find any none at the plugs or coil not even a spark jump from the msd box. all ignition parts are new only old ignition parts are the distributor and points but there is no corrosion on the points...car is and has been garage kept. any ideas?
Start testing.
Power to coil, resistance of points, points opening and closing properly, condenser good, MSD box good, etc.
I'd eliminate the MSD box first, then go on from there.
- Eric
Power to coil, resistance of points, points opening and closing properly, condenser good, MSD box good, etc.
I'd eliminate the MSD box first, then go on from there.
- Eric
If it's too high you won't be getting much spark there. Normal for new wires is around 4-5 ohms.BTW, if it has an MSD box, it's not an all original 73 Cutlass. Does it also have an MSD HEI distributor? If it does, good chance the coil pack is your problem.
I checked the wires and they were good. no its not msd hei its the oem distributor with points. All original meaning no major mods to throw anything off but just a msd box could be taken off in a few minutes and its back to original lol
Does the distributor turn while cranking?
If there isn't any voltage at the coil primary (low voltage) there will not be any spark. Unlikely that the condenser is bad and it is not the cause of no primary voltage to the coil.
There should be a pink wire to the primary on the coil that supplies reduced voltage in the run position to prevent the points from burning. The pink wire is not standard wire it is special resistance wire for this application. This wire may have burned or have a bad connection, trace it back to the firewall.
I believe there should also be a yellow wire to the coil primary from the starter solenoid to supply full battery voltage only while cranking. Is there voltage to the primary (low voltage) side of the coil while cranking?
If there isn't any voltage at the coil primary (low voltage) there will not be any spark. Unlikely that the condenser is bad and it is not the cause of no primary voltage to the coil.
There should be a pink wire to the primary on the coil that supplies reduced voltage in the run position to prevent the points from burning. The pink wire is not standard wire it is special resistance wire for this application. This wire may have burned or have a bad connection, trace it back to the firewall.
I believe there should also be a yellow wire to the coil primary from the starter solenoid to supply full battery voltage only while cranking. Is there voltage to the primary (low voltage) side of the coil while cranking?
If you have the msd box disconnected and your back to the original setup on the distributor then I would run a jumper from the battery pos terminal to the coil + terminal and see if it will start. What the jumper does is take everything out of the equation and only runs off the coil and distributor. If it starts you are missing power when the key is on. Please note to turn the car off you will need to remove the jumper wire.
The ignition switch is located on the top surface of the steering column way down under the dashboard.
You have to drop the column in order to get to it.
It does look like you describe.
- Eric
You have to drop the column in order to get to it.
It does look like you describe.
- Eric
I'd test it first. Check the wires back to the switch.
Do the warning lamps and the fuel gauge work when you turn on the switch?
If they do, then the switch is fine, and the problem is after it.
Check the heavy pink wire that comes from the switch - it goes to the fuse block and to the coil. If it's got power, you need to check the resistance wire that comes out the firewall side of the connector plug and goes to the coil. The wire could be broken or the contacts could be bad.
- Eric
Do the warning lamps and the fuel gauge work when you turn on the switch?
If they do, then the switch is fine, and the problem is after it.
Check the heavy pink wire that comes from the switch - it goes to the fuse block and to the coil. If it's got power, you need to check the resistance wire that comes out the firewall side of the connector plug and goes to the coil. The wire could be broken or the contacts could be bad.
- Eric
If you've got warning lights, then the pink wire has juice, and you need to look beyond it to the resistance wire that comes out of the firewall plug and goes to the coil.
- Eric
- Eric
Last edited by MDchanic; Oct 12, 2013 at 07:18 PM.
that is very true. i just got 3.4 volts to the coil with key on but when cranking the engine it stays at 3.4 volts this was achieved by putting new ring connectors on the wires that go to the pos and neg posts on the coil (msd reconnected) without msd it has 11.4 volts. no spark at the spark plugs tho...i dont know why i started messing with it this late but i got a little closer to it firing up
Last edited by Nasty455; Oct 12, 2013 at 09:51 PM.
From what i've read here not knowing the wiring to the msd it appears to have a resistance problem 3.4v at coil and not able to carry the load, ie bad connection somewhere.Like i said not knowing the wiring on your car it should have 12v cranking to coil + from the starter and about 8v koeo koer with stock points system.
From what i've read here not knowing the wiring to the msd it appears to have a resistance problem 3.4v at coil and not able to carry the load, ie bad connection somewhere.Like i said not knowing the wiring on your car it should have 12v cranking to coil + from the starter and about 8v (edited) with stock points system.
This is correct. I would, like I stated earlier, take the MSD box out of the equation an return it back to original and go from there. It will be easier to troubleshoot.
So you have no power to the resistor wire.
Next step is to find out where you do have power.
Annoying as it might be, it may be easiest to remove the firewall half of the plug and test at the connectors there.
There's a ⅜"-head screw in the center of the plug on the firewall side (under the mud and undercoating) - remove it and you can unplug the two firewall-side plug halves from the other side.
Unfortunately, I do not know which of the terminals is the one you're looking for, but I'm sure someone here who has replaced his resistance wire can tell you, or, in the worst case, you can follow the wire to find it.
- Eric
Next step is to find out where you do have power.
Annoying as it might be, it may be easiest to remove the firewall half of the plug and test at the connectors there.
There's a ⅜"-head screw in the center of the plug on the firewall side (under the mud and undercoating) - remove it and you can unplug the two firewall-side plug halves from the other side.
Unfortunately, I do not know which of the terminals is the one you're looking for, but I'm sure someone here who has replaced his resistance wire can tell you, or, in the worst case, you can follow the wire to find it.
- Eric
hey all i have not had much time to mess around with the car but today i poked around it and im still in the same boat with the spark issue and its really annoying me that i cant find the problem...it baffles me how it can run great one day and then just die the next and its such a simple ignition system
ok...not to be a pain but could you walk me through what you suggested ive never tried that before. would any external ballast resistors work like a Mallory, accel, or msd something i could just grab at the local autozone. thanks greatly appreciated


