[xj] Ignition Resistor Smoke

Date sent: Tue, 12 May 1998 08:32:58 -0400 (EDT)From: Sleighman SLEIGH%TVAX01@utrcgw.utc.com
Subject: [xj] Ignition Resistor Smoke
To: xj@jag-lovers.org

I know the British think of everything, but I’m almost certain the smoke
coming from that resistor bolted to the side of the coil is not a
airshow style smoke system.

It’s the ballast resistor.

At first I thought it was just some oil had splashed on it and would burn
off. But, she’s still smoking… Car seems to run fine, but this really
can’t be right. What purpose does that resistor serve anyway.

Here’s the scoop, it’s a 6 volt coil! The resistor is there to drop the 12 volts
(actually more like 13.8 volts) from the cars electical system down to 6-ish
volts for the coil. Don’t panic, almost all cars are set up this way. Here’s why:

(Very generalized discription follows. Your mileage may vary!)

When you try to start the car, and while the starter motor is cranking the
engine, the current drain on the battery is so high that the electrical system
voltage drops (Every noticed how the lights sometimes flicker if you try to start
the car at night with the lights on?) by as much as half. So we install a 6 volt
coil in the hope that it will be able to produce enough of a spark to start the
engine while it’s beeing cranked. But, after the engine starts and the alternator
goes to work recharging the battery, the system voltage comes back up to 13.8
volts. So, as soon as you release the key switch from the start position, that
resistor is switched into the coil primary circuit to reduce the voltage to 6 volts,
and the coil is happy.

Simple!

“Ah,” you say, “but my brother-in-law has a ( insert your favorite sub-compact
here) and I’ve worked on it, and I know that it doesn’t do that.” says you, “I’m
certain that there is only one skinny wire to from the coil to the distributor and
one skinny wire to the keyswitch.” says you, thinking that you can throw ole’
Marv a curve here.

Sigh… All cars are build to a price spec. Some manufacturers eliminate that
extra wire and switch contact set in the keyswitch in order to save a buck, but
use the same 6 volt coil as everyone else 'cause they are cheaper 'cause they
are mass-produced. Besides, a little tiny 4 cylinder engine in your typical rice-
burner is pretty easy to crank, hence much less strain on the battery and such,
so more voltage is available to fire the coil. All it has to do is manage to fire a
cylinder or two and it’s running.

“So, why does mine smoke?” says you. Well, it shouldn’t, so there is a
problem. The resister gets rid of that extra 6 volts by turning it into heat. Yours
is making to much heat, so it’s being asked to eat too much voltage. a couple
of possibilities:

  1. The coil is partially shorted, so it’s not using up it’s fair share of the 13.8
    volts available, and this forces the ballast resistor to over-eat, because it’s gotta
    go somewhere, and it over-heats (this is my guess)

  2. The dwell is too long. These parts are made to work only part time. The
    points in the distributor close, then open (or this close-open function is
    accomplished electronically if it’s a distributor without points.) If they are
    staying closed for too long (dwell too long) current flows through the coil (and
    resistor) for too long a time, and it’s rest period is too short, so it overheats and
    smokes.

  3. The resistor is partially shorted, so this allows the current flow through it to
    be too high, so it overheats. This failure is uncommon becuse when the resistor
    is abused it will ussually burn open insteat of partially short. Besides, this
    failure will ussually take out the coil before the resistor smokes.

  4. A combination of failures. The points stick, which causes the coil to overheat
    so it developes a partial short, which causes the resistor to get hot, so it
    developes a short etc. You get the idea.

Does any of this long-winded rambling help?

Marvin
'74 XJ6L
'75 MGB
'71 Chev truck (it always runs!)

The resister needs to be there to protect the coil and ignition amplifier. It is normal for it to get hot, and it will smoke if oil gets on it. It can get oily from either the coil leaking, or from engine oil getting to it.

At 08:32 AM 5/12/98 -0400, Sleighman wrote:

I know the British think of everything, but I’m almost certain the smoke
coming from that resistor bolted to the side of the coil is not a
airshow style smoke system.

At first I thought it was just some oil had splashed on it and would burn
off. But, she’s still smoking… Car seems to run fine, but this really
can’t be right. What purpose does that resistor serve anyway. I can get
the thing to stop smoking by disconnecting it, but since the car won’t
run, that’s not much of an option!

Any suggestions?

85 xj-6 VDP
77 AA-1C SuperLynx

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