TyTexan
Junior Member
- Joined
- Aug 25, 2020
- Posts
- 6
- Reaction score
- 14
- Location
- Farwell, TX
- First Name
- Tyler
- Truck Year
- 1986
- Truck Model
- c-20
- Engine Size
- 350
Ok. I am brand new here. I have never joined any of these groups because I usually search the web and find someone who has had a similar enough problem and there were enough answers to point me in the right direction. But I am at a loss I hope you guys can help me on this one.
I have a 1986 C20 with a 350. Everything is stock. A good classic old truck in pretty good shape. Was running well and suddenly died one day about 2 weeks ago. No spark. Opened up the coil cap (has the in cap coil) and the coil was physically melted. Had melted plastic coming from within the coil. Swapped the coil and it immediately fired up, ran well. Ran for about 3 days and suddenly died again. Opened up the cover and another melted coil. This time I changed all the plugs and wires, rotor cap, new distributor cap, checked the ground to engine on the ground strap. I tested my alternator, it tested fine, but was making a funny noise, so I replaced it anyway. I though I might be getting too much voltage to the coil. Put it all back together, fired right up ran well for about 5 minutes and fried another coil....ARRRRRRGGGGGG! Coils aren't terribly expensive, but at 40 bucks a whack on top of all the other stuff I've replaced, this is getting frustrating.
I don't suspect a bad ignition control module as every time I put in a new coil, it fires right up and runs just fine. Something is causing great heat to my coil, melting it and shorting it out. I know over voltage or bad ground will cause the coil to over work and over heat. But with good battery voltage, and a good ground with the ground strap in place, I am at a loss. New plugs and wires shouldn't be causing the problem. What's worse is that it seems like the failure time is getting shorter and shorter.
Any ideas, tips or pointers?
I have a 1986 C20 with a 350. Everything is stock. A good classic old truck in pretty good shape. Was running well and suddenly died one day about 2 weeks ago. No spark. Opened up the coil cap (has the in cap coil) and the coil was physically melted. Had melted plastic coming from within the coil. Swapped the coil and it immediately fired up, ran well. Ran for about 3 days and suddenly died again. Opened up the cover and another melted coil. This time I changed all the plugs and wires, rotor cap, new distributor cap, checked the ground to engine on the ground strap. I tested my alternator, it tested fine, but was making a funny noise, so I replaced it anyway. I though I might be getting too much voltage to the coil. Put it all back together, fired right up ran well for about 5 minutes and fried another coil....ARRRRRRGGGGGG! Coils aren't terribly expensive, but at 40 bucks a whack on top of all the other stuff I've replaced, this is getting frustrating.
I don't suspect a bad ignition control module as every time I put in a new coil, it fires right up and runs just fine. Something is causing great heat to my coil, melting it and shorting it out. I know over voltage or bad ground will cause the coil to over work and over heat. But with good battery voltage, and a good ground with the ground strap in place, I am at a loss. New plugs and wires shouldn't be causing the problem. What's worse is that it seems like the failure time is getting shorter and shorter.
Any ideas, tips or pointers?