| Steve, 
You can not properly test a coil with a common ohm meter except for
total failures like open, nearly open, shorts between windings, and
maybe direct shorts from terminals to ground.  First off, unless you
have a pretty sophisticated ohm meter you really can not accurately
measure resistances below a few ohms.  For most consumer and development
lab ohm meters measuring .9 ohm across a circuit that is supposed to be
.6 ohm would be within expectations.  If you have a high end milli-ohm
meter then it would be suspicious but not necessarily indicative of a
bad coil.
Frank  
> >
> Tom:
> I didn't think about the gas formula idea.  Could be it, I 
> guess. I did 
> figure out how to test the coil. It pulls .9 ohms across the pimary 
> circuit and 10.6 ohms across the secondary circuit. Now I 
> have to figure 
> out what's normal for this coil. Pertronix says it's a "super low 
> resistance .6 ohm" coil. If my coil in fact has .9 resistance, that's 
> 50% higher than it's claimed tto have, so maybe the coil is in fact 
> toast, if I'm reading things correctly.
> 
> Steve Sage
 |