flatheadjim Posted January 29, 2010 Report Posted January 29, 2010 Does the length of the Plug Wire have any effect on the quality of Spark? I'm thinking of running the Wires lengthwise with the head then down and around back to the Distributor which would just about double their length. Will this lessen the Spark or maybe induce Voltage across and into another wire? I was also thinking of running the wires in a metal tube of some sort to clean things up a bit. I plan on using Modern silicone wraped wires. Anybody remember there Electricty 101 class? Quote
aero3113 Posted January 29, 2010 Report Posted January 29, 2010 I remember seeing a pic of a tube that someone made to run the plug wires on this forum. Maybe someone will post it for you. Quote
greg g Posted January 29, 2010 Report Posted January 29, 2010 Well usually the longer the wire the more the resistance and voltage drop but with 20K volts or so it shouldn't be an issue. Lots of upper crust cars ran their wires in a conduit for a cleaner appearence. I just saw a picture of a flat 6 whee the wires came down the pass side of the engine head with each one exiting the tube even with and about 2 inches away from the plug. Might have been a heavy duty truck, but it looked pretty nice. Quote
Niel Hoback Posted January 29, 2010 Report Posted January 29, 2010 I think I saw where the straight eights use a wire cover that runs the length of the head. However, my 55 Buick manual shows which wires to run next to each other under the wire covers that run along the sides of the heads so they don't induce voltage into the wrong ones. I didn't know about it until I moved the wires in their brackets and then I could tell the difference. Might want to look into that. Quote
aero3113 Posted January 31, 2010 Report Posted January 31, 2010 Check out this Chrysler it has its plug wires run through a tube. http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/Chrysler-Imperial-1950-CHRYSLER-IMPERIAL-4-DOOR-TRUE-SURVIVOR_W0QQitemZ120519769254QQcmdZViewItemQQptZUS_Cars_Trucks?hash=item1c0f89bca6 Quote
PatrickG Posted February 1, 2010 Report Posted February 1, 2010 I'm not sure if this is true as it has never happened to me personally, but its something to consider, My highschool auto teacher always said having the coil far away from the distributor led to premature failure (of the coil). anybody else ever hear this? Quote
greg g Posted February 1, 2010 Report Posted February 1, 2010 Worked for all those Plymouths with the coil mounted through the firewall. Quote
PatrickG Posted February 1, 2010 Report Posted February 1, 2010 Worked for all those Plymouths with the coil mounted through the firewall. well then in that case i'm sure my statement doesn't carry much weight I stand corrected Quote
flatheadjim Posted February 2, 2010 Author Report Posted February 2, 2010 That's a great picture of the Chrysler engine, Thanks, the way they used the small metal box type tube is kinda what I was thinking to use myself. When I get it all put together I will post some pictures with a report on how well it works out. Flatheadjim Quote
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