When my Jeep is bad to start, the first aid to me is to change the condenser.To me it is the first step.Of course,when the battery is ok.
***Remember:the CONDENSER is the principle cause of the "NO or BAD SPARK".
We can forget the old condenser inside the distributor and put another new condenser attached to the coil bracket ,its wire may be fixed in negative(-) coil nut.
One little trick I use from my "hotrodding days" is.... just loosen the screw and slip the condensor out of the clamp , the simply slide the new one in and tighten ....no fishing needed
Hope this helps
John
42 Chevy G7117
44 Ford M20 armored car
44 CCKW 353 A1 660 gal Tanker
45 CCKW 353 B2 Air-portable
Ben Hur 1 ton trailer
MVPA#26900
John,when we do not use glasses(before 40 years old) is very easy to do this work.But ,I have a great solution:When/If I need I use the magnifying glass.There are four kind of lenses.We have to get a big lamp too.
An answer to a Pilothouse(1948-1953) Dodge forum member:
Guys
The condenser doesn't care whether it's inside or out of the distributor case. What does matter though is that for it to do it's job it MUST be mounted close to the points. It has two functions, one- to absorb the electricity when the points just open thereby protecting points and, two- to send that electricity back to the coil the very instant the magnetic field collapses and generate more spark.
In 40+ years of wrenching I've only had about a dozen condensers go bad, those were due to heat and vibration, a manufacturing error on the equipment. If you're popping so many condensers that you need to mount them out of the dist body you've got issues elsewhere, such as coil wired backwards, wrong coil, wrong MFD or capacity condenser for the system, bad grounds at the distributor and block to chassis, plug wire leakage and arcing back into the cap and internals etc.
Bryan