I've never worked with points ignition very much. I was able to get the 65 Rambler running with points but the points burned quickly costing me a new muffler due to a backfire. I installed a Pertronix ignitor in that car. So today I tried to solve the no-spark problem on my 62 Classic. This has an old style Delco distributor with the cast iron (or steel) housing. I had managed to get an intermittent weak orange spark out of the coil wire a few days ago but I couldn't get anything today. I did some reading on the internet, used my multimeter to take some readings and changed the points and condenser. Still no joy. I was not able to get a good difference in resistance reading across the points between open and closed. I called my brother (retired airline mechanic and all around good wrench) and he said make sure the distributor is grounded well, describing a couple of different systems he had worked on. The 1962 TSM discussed the Autolite distributor but ignores the Delco, so no special tips were forthcoming there. After fiddling with it for a long while I pulled the distributor and cleaned up the base plate and the boss on the block with lacquer thinner. Tested that the position of the points made a difference in resistance between open and closed while on the bench and set the point gap very carefully. I reinstalled it and got a consistent rather weak orange spark. Next I went to the internet and checked the Mallory ignition site which was the first one that popped up on Google. The tip there was the make sure the condenser case is well grounded to the distributor. The site said that the retainer sleeve has little nubs to puncture the antirust coating on the condenser shell. HMMMMM. So I removed the condenser and the sleeve and very lightly ground external and internal surfaces (condenser shell and sleeve respectively) with Mr. Dremel and reinstalled it. Fat blue spark. Installed the new cap and rotor and got to hear that powerful 195.6 roar to life for the first time since I've owned it. No knocks or unusual noises. I'll warm it up again tomorrow and do a compression test. I don't think the engine has ever been rebuilt and it has 118,000 miles so I'm not really holding much hope for long term service from that engine. Still it sounds good. Next step, rebuild the carburetor. Then the brakes. Joe Fulton _______________________________________________ AMC-list mailing list AMC-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://list.amc-list.com/listinfo.cgi/amc-list-amc-list.com