</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Found out that I left the key switch on all this time - is that what caused the battery to drain? )</font>
Well, if the points were in a closed position.. then.. yeah.. you could/would have had about a 4amp drain on it. By the way.. generally when you do this.. the points are toast.. sometimes they weld together.. sometimes the heat melts the rubbing block, or the insulating grommets. Standard procedure after letting your ignition coill, ballast resistor, and points roast overnight is to replace them.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( and while it was out, I measured the resistance of the system at the battery terminals - around 50 ohms with the key switch off. That seems awfully low to me - it would mean a continuous 1/4 amp drain. )</font>
Could be a couple things.. could be a bad diode inthe alternator trio, or other defect in the regulator. Could also be a miss-wired 3-wire type setup, and the previous owner wired power to the #1 (field excite) terminal, instead of to the #2 ( remote sense ) terminal. The remote sense terminal typically gets wired down to the charge stud, for tractor applications.. and it won't discharge the battery.. however.. if power is wired tot he field excite terminal on a 3 wire job, then it will deffinately discharge the battery by exciting the alternators field.. etc... As stated.. could be a defect in the alternatoras well.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( brother put in a new battery because he said the other one wouldn't charge - maybe something else is going on?
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Ya think /forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif That seems kinda like tossing a rock into a pool and watching it sink, and then tossing another one in, and expecting it to -not- sink, without having done anything to cause that intervention...
It's really starting to sound like a bad alternator. I'd take it in to a store that offers free checks.. then if it is bad.. get a delco 10si or 12si to repalce it. Many junkyards have barrels of these for 25-50$ already checked...
Avoid the '1-wire' jobs.. get a '3-wire' one.. the 1 wire jobs take a very high rpm to self excite..
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Side mount distributor
Resistor in series with coil
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Sounds like you are running a 6v coil, and using a dropping resistor to waste some power and dissipate it as heat... A much better and ideal setup would be to simply get a real 12v coil... Napa has a good one.. IC14SB... it's a real 12v coil.. don't use any ressitors with it. Using a real 12v coil meanus you can run a wider sparkplug gap to make use of the higher secondary voltage potential that coil should have.. also menas the system will be slightly more robust when corrosion sets in and starts degrading contacts... ( 6v systems suffer more from this due to the already low system voltage, and just barely adequate secondary votlage of the old style coils.. )
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Regulator inside gennerator )</font>
Just to check here.. do you have a 12v alternator with an internal regulator.. or do you have a 12v generator.. they are 2 entirely different beasts... and have their own different troubleshooting info. My message was based on an alternator application..
Soundguy