TwoBallScrewBall
Lieutenant Commander
- Joined
- Sep 14, 2003
- Messages
- 1,695
Well, a nice iboats member sold me a delco EST ignition he opted not to use. Something failed in my points ignition a few weeks ago (don't know what exactly because I jsut replaced everything all at once to fix it) and resulted in me getting towed in at 2:00am, so I really wanted an electronic conversion. I was going to go with the pertronix, but then this opportunity came up and I jumped on it. <br /><br />I got the EST installed and working today. I started working on it yesterday, but a bad thunderstorm dumped on me before I could finish the job so I finished it today. Seems to run very well on the trailer, going to take it for a test run tomorrow if the weather holds. I noticed a couple things. <br /><br />For one, with the points and mechanical advance on the old distributor, when setting the timing it would bounce around a degree or two each way, with the EST installed the timing mark is rock solid, the timing light blinked at exactly 0 degrees every time. <br /><br />Also, the idle is definitely much smoother (RPM much more steady) and it seems to start quicker, the starter barely turns over and its running. I haven't re-gapped my plugs yet, they're still at .035, need to open them up to .045. Didnt run into any problems with the wiring, just followed the diagram I had for a V8 EST engine, same wires just 4 more sparkplugs! <br /><br />The shift interrupt seems to work fine too, the OMC ESA module is completely bypassed and Im now just running +12v through the interrupt switch, which gets fed to the timing shunt when the switch trips and seems to idle down the engine well. This was how the diagram (a merc diagram) showed it to work, and it seems to be working. <br /><br />Just a couple things that I wondered about...<br /><br />For one, other than the resistor wire which only had 11.7 volts, I could not find another switched ignition wire with a full +12V at the engine. I read the ESA needs the full voltage so what I did was wire up a relay. The resistor wire turns on the relay and the relay passes straight +12V from one of the starter solenoid posts to the distributor/coil. <br /><br />Also, the merc diagram shows that the two white wires on the timing shunt should not be jumped except when setting timing. If I remove the jumper and hit the shift interrupt the engine just dies, no stumbling, just dies like if you turned it off. If I leave them jumped and hit the shift interrupt the engine idles down like I think it should. Anyone know for sure how this should be wired up? Jumped or not?<br /><br />Other than that it's working perfect, can't wait to try it out on the water tomorrow.