About a month ago, my dad took the Jeep out for a stroll, and the Coil died on him. He took his boat mechanic with him, changed the coil (I ALWAYS carry spares), and he was on his way. He proceeded to take it to an electical mechanic, and he tested several things, and they all checked out OK (voltage being received by the coil from the alternator, if there was any electricity being received by the coil when the key was turned off, short circuits, etc.). He told my dad he thought the issue was excesive heat. Today, we were driving back from Panama to Costa Rica, and the coil died again. Again, I changed it, and we were on our way, but this is REALLY getting tiring. When I changed the coil, obviously the whole assembly (coil, bolts, nuts and mounting plate) were too hot to touch. I am now considering buying a Flame Thrower coil with mount and simply installing the coil away from the engine (in the firewall, as high as possible). What do you guys think about this? Pros/Cons?
For your reference, this is what I am planning on getting:
While it's the perfect coil to go with the PerTronix Ignitor breakerless ignition, our 40,000 volt Flame-Thrower canister coil can benefit virtually any distributor type inductive system. Its higher voltage allows larger spark plug gaps for added power, smoother response and better fuel economy. These coils are internally resisted so they are compatible with many ignition systems.
Our oil filled coils offer great heat control for street driven vehicles, while our epoxy filled coils provide superior winding support for high vibration environments in offroad vehicles and boats.
Features
•40,000 volts
•Available chrome plated or black for that "stock look".
•For use with inductive ignition systems.
•1.5 or 3.0 Ohm primary resistance values available.
•Legal in all 50 states and Canada. (C.A.R.B. E.O. #D-57-10)
•Warranty: 90 Days
By the way, do I want 1.5 or 3.0 Ohm resistance? And do I want oil filled or resine filled? I am thinking 3.0 Ohm resin filled, but not sure...