
Wire Size

Best Answer dklawson , 18 September 2015 - 05:53 PM
That is correct. You have effectively bypassed/eliminated the ballast resistive wire and are now supplying 12V to coil (+). The electronic ignition module's red wire will be connected to coil (+) so it gets 12V. The black wire from the module will go to coil (-) and this takes the place of the short white/black wire that used to go between coil (-) and the distributor when points were fitted. If you have a tachometer, its sense wire will still go to coil (-).
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#1
Posted 18 September 2015 - 10:56 AM
#2
Posted 18 September 2015 - 10:57 AM
#3
Posted 18 September 2015 - 12:19 PM
You specify wire sizes differently in Europe than we do here. I would advise you to use a 16 AWG white wire for connection to coil (+). You can go a bit smaller though. My references at work indicate that you could use wire with an area of 1 square mm or larger.
#4
Posted 18 September 2015 - 12:24 PM
#5
Posted 18 September 2015 - 01:03 PM
1mm thinwall is rated for 16A, so that would be fine with a 10A inline fuse.
#6
Posted 18 September 2015 - 03:03 PM
WiredBy... I am not familiar with using inline fuses on ignition wiring to the coil.
#7
Posted 18 September 2015 - 03:05 PM
Nope nor me ? I never fuse the Coil Feed
#8
Posted 18 September 2015 - 03:36 PM
I have seen coil wiring fused on American cars but not British. I guess if the inrush current isn't enough to blow the fuse it doesn't hurt anything... I just haven't seen this on a Mini.
#9
Posted 18 September 2015 - 03:42 PM
#10
Posted 18 September 2015 - 03:47 PM
#11
Posted 18 September 2015 - 04:19 PM
If you are bypassing the resistive wire and installing a "standard" ignition coil, you would run a white wire from a switched terminal on the fuse box to coil (+). Remove the white/pink resistive wire from the coil and tape off its terminal so it cannot touch earth. There may also be a white/yellow wire on coil (+). You can leave that in place or remove it and tape it off... your choice. The white/yellow wire will not be contributing to the ignition system anymore. If you have a tachometer, it will have a sense wire connected to coil (-). That wire is typically white/black (in factory color code). There is also a white/black from the coil (-) terminal going to the distributor (when points are fitted).
#12
Posted 18 September 2015 - 04:23 PM
#13
Posted 18 September 2015 - 04:24 PM
#14
Posted 18 September 2015 - 05:53 PM Best Answer
That is correct. You have effectively bypassed/eliminated the ballast resistive wire and are now supplying 12V to coil (+). The electronic ignition module's red wire will be connected to coil (+) so it gets 12V. The black wire from the module will go to coil (-) and this takes the place of the short white/black wire that used to go between coil (-) and the distributor when points were fitted. If you have a tachometer, its sense wire will still go to coil (-).
#15
Posted 18 September 2015 - 07:42 PM
thanks alot guys.
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