mdainsd
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- San Diego, CA
Things I have learned along the way about M37 distributors, well actually most M series distributors.
The two vent lines are not there to cool the coil. In those tiny little lines with no forced flow you wont get enough air to cool a gnats ass. They are there to strip condensation and ionized air out of the distributor. The air gets ionized by the high voltage discharges between the tip of the rotor and the six contacts that feed the plugs. Remember there is no physical contact, the spark jumps that gap. As the air becomes more ionized it starts to become conductive and misfiring or no firing will result. We all know what condensation will do in a distributor. Heat is removed by the fins on the part of the distributor that encircle the coil. Notice the tight fit of the coil? Thats why.
Next the filter capacitors: The filter capacitor is not to be confused with the condenser across the points. Early trucks have no filter capacitor in the distributor, theirs is in a box mounted on the firewall next to the horn. Later trucks have the filter cap built into the connector that one connects the 24V ignition cable to the distributor. The early ones were prone to failure. The later ones also fail with regularity. All my M stuff I have removed the built in type filter capacitor completely. For originality on my very early M37 and M38 i retain the large firewall mounted filter, but I have spares.
The two vent lines are not there to cool the coil. In those tiny little lines with no forced flow you wont get enough air to cool a gnats ass. They are there to strip condensation and ionized air out of the distributor. The air gets ionized by the high voltage discharges between the tip of the rotor and the six contacts that feed the plugs. Remember there is no physical contact, the spark jumps that gap. As the air becomes more ionized it starts to become conductive and misfiring or no firing will result. We all know what condensation will do in a distributor. Heat is removed by the fins on the part of the distributor that encircle the coil. Notice the tight fit of the coil? Thats why.
Next the filter capacitors: The filter capacitor is not to be confused with the condenser across the points. Early trucks have no filter capacitor in the distributor, theirs is in a box mounted on the firewall next to the horn. Later trucks have the filter cap built into the connector that one connects the 24V ignition cable to the distributor. The early ones were prone to failure. The later ones also fail with regularity. All my M stuff I have removed the built in type filter capacitor completely. For originality on my very early M37 and M38 i retain the large firewall mounted filter, but I have spares.