I bought one for my 8n last fall, at a NAPA way out in the country. They probably sell more for tractors than they do for cars at that store. The guy at the counter didn’t even look at the computer to find it.If it fits in the mount try it, it will probably work fine. Both are pretty simple tractors.
Mine cranks over real good but clearly there is no spark. No magneto ignition either (it has a coil connected to a distributer cap).I run the cub with no battery and never paid much attention as it’s crank start and I just assume magneto ignition?
I did on my Ford, but not yet on the Farmall. I will before I try one on that. Worse case, I got another spare $ 34 NAPA, made in China, coil for the Ford.Did you check for voltage from the switch to coil first before buying a new coil..??
“Less than” is not always the ticket. This will be the third one on my 1951 Ford 8n. I’ve heard that the NAPA ones are supposed to last the longest. The last one that I got for it was from TSC. I see that the new ones from NAPA are made in China. There seems to be quite a variation in product quality coming out of that country.Lots of places to get a 6 volt coil for less then that;
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I’m not 100 % certain that I am. The original from my Ford 8n might still be good. I’ve still got it in my parts cabinet, along with the two new NAPA Chinese ones. It was just one of many parts that we changed out the last time it had acted up. It didn’t run right again that time, until I changed out the whole distributer.Strange that you are having that much issue with coils.
Yes positive ground. That’s not the issue. The tractor was running good and stopped suddenly, as if someone had turned off a switch. It probably would not have started and ran if the coil polarity was wrong.Is the tractor a positive ground? Is the coil polarity correct?
I’m not sure my 12 volt test light will work at 6 volts but I do have a cheap hand held multi-meter that I can probably use for diagnosing. Thanks for the tips, I’ll refer to that list when I get back at it.Sounds like more of an electrical connection problem being that it died that quick. A simple test light will help you diagnose that problem. Put the clip end on a good ground, battery is best if the lead is long enough. Put the tester end on the input side of coil from switch, it should light up with switch in the run position. If you show voltage there, with tractor in neutral, put tester on the output side, and roll the engine over with the starter. Test light should flash. If it flashes, put the tester on the connection point on the distributor and turn over, you should see it flash. Doing that, you know your wiring is good to there. Remove the distributor cap and check the connection inside, you should still see if flashing when turning over. I have seen those Bakelite insulators crack, and short out on the distributor case.
If you have voltage to there, turn the switch off for a moment. Rotate engine until points touch. Turn switch on, and break/separate the points manually with a small screwdriver, you should see a small spark when the points separate. If you see a spark, look closely at the points, especially the rub block. The lesser expensive contact points set's rub blocks can wear, bend, or completely come off. The one on my TO35 Ferguson was completely gone. Friends of mine literally gave me this tractor and several attachments just to get it out of their yard. They got frustrated after piddling with it, and just wanted it gone. A new points & condenser kit, new plugs, purged/cleaned the fuel system, and a good carb cleaning, and it fired right up. A few more issues to deal with when I get time but should be a good useable tractor once time allows to look into those.
If you have voltage to inside the distributor, I'd have to guess it's the condenser. Some simple diagnostics like this can save you a lot of money just throwing parts at it.