Marty Roth Posted March 22, 2020 Share Posted March 22, 2020 (edited) Different books show different connections. The garage sale Dwell/Tach I bought some time ago says: For Negative Ground Cars- Connect RED lead to wire from Coil to distributor Connect BLACK wire to any good ground My older unit says Connect RED lead to wire from battery to Distributor Connect Black lead to wire from Coil to distributor These two versions give very different readings, Which one is correct? I'm actually using this on a 12 Volt system, but the depth of experience of our Pre-War folks is exemplary. Thanks in advance for your thoughts Edited March 22, 2020 by Marty Roth (see edit history) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bloo Posted March 22, 2020 Share Posted March 22, 2020 (edited) Assuming a 12 volt negative ground car and a 12 volt dwell meter, and it has only 2 leads, most would connect like your first example. For positive ground, you could in theory reverse the leads. If it has more than 2 leads, or is anything weird, stick to 12 volt negative ground cars unless the instructions say otherwise. For what it's worth, a 2 lead analog meter should be safe to try on 6 volts, too. When the points are closed (100% "on" time), you need the meter to go to maximum dwell. When the points are open (0% "on" time), the meter needs to go to zero dwell. If it won't do that, something is wrong. Maximum dwell is the number of distributor degrees between firings (assuming one coil and one distributor). So, thats 45 degrees for an Eight, 60 degrees for a six, and 90 degrees for a four. Edited March 22, 2020 by Bloo (see edit history) 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Marty Roth Posted March 23, 2020 Author Share Posted March 23, 2020 (edited) Thank you Bloo, That was my thought as well, but having an alternate set of instructions was messing with what little grey matter I have left. This also seems to work on the 6 Volt cars Edited March 23, 2020 by Marty Roth (see edit history) 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Larry Schramm Posted March 24, 2020 Share Posted March 24, 2020 To use a 12 volt timing light on a 6 volt car, I just attach the light to a 12 volt battery and the other lead to the spark plug wire. Same goes for the oscilloscope that I use to tune my vehicles. Just use a 12 volt battery to power up the device. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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