"Starts
hard, and stalls in traffic once in a while, hey?" Gus Wilson said, "I
guess you know the answer as well as I do, Doc." "A hundred to one
something has gone wrong in your ignition system."
Dr. Marvin, who in addition to being the town's top
children's physician is an enthusiastic amateur automobile mechanic, nodded
agreement. "That's what I figured," he said, "but I haven't had a
chance to locate the trouble. It might be in the distributor, it might
be in the coil, and it might be in the condenser."
"Yep," Gus agreed as he fired up his pipe.
"And then again, it might be in the wiring. Wiring can play you some
funny tricks. Just this morning a young fellow drove a '31 sedan in
here to have a new battery cable put in. He said he'd bought the job dirt
cheap a couple of weeks ago, but at that he'd got stung, because it had a
grabbing clutch that made the car jerk whenever he started out. He
said that he'd had the bus in a half dozen shops. And that after testing it,
each said that the clutch was hard. "Well, I put in a new battery ground
cable and then I thought I'd better take a quick look at the rest of the
wiring. As soon as I'd taken up the floorboards I noticed that the
insulation of the other battery cable, the one which runs from the battery
to the starting-motor switch, had been chewed off right down to the bare
wire. The cable ran under the floorboards close to the clutch pedal,
and the cotter pin in the pedal joint had worked part way out and cut into
the insulation every time the pedal was moved. Of course, whenever the
pin came in contact with the bare wire the result was a short which made the
engine skip and the car jerk. That was the "bad clutch" which made the
young fellow so sure that he had been gypped. I fixed it by taping the
bad spot and putting in a new cotter pin-and saved him somewhere between ten
and twenty bucks."
"That was a queer one," Dr. Marvin said
interestedly. "I remember one something like it. Once I was
having trouble with---", he broke off and looked at his watch. "Darn
you, Gus Wilson!" he growled. "Every time I come into this shop I get
listening to you and fall way behind on my schedule! I've got a lot of
calls to make this afternoon, but I'd like to get you to check my ignition
and fix up whatever is wrong with it. Suppose I send the car over
about four o'clock---could you get it ready so that I could use it tomorrow
morning?" I don't think I'll have to make any calls this evening.
If I do, I'll get a taxi. I hate to ask you to work overtime, but-"
"That's all right," Gus assured him, "You do a lot of overtime work, Doc."
“Why shouldn't I?" “But if you're not doing
anything special this evening, why not bring the car over yourself about
half past seven? If you do, I'll show you how to make a simple little
gadget which makes locating ignition trouble a cinch. I used to have
one and for a long time I've been intending to make another. How about it?"
"Maybe I'll have as much fun with it as I've had with that vacuum tester you
made me," the doctor said. "All right, Gus, I'll be here!"
When Dr. Marvin arrived he found Gus Wilson's
workbench already covered with shavings and Gus plastering a bandage around
a cut thumb, "Darn it all," he said disgustedly, "I can work on engines all
the time and not hurt my hands twice in a year, but every time I start
fooling with a wood saw or a chisel I cut myself. I guess I'll have to
admit that I'm no carpenter." "Let's see that cut," the doctor said.
"Put some iodine on it? All right-I guess you'll get over it.
What do you call this gadget of yours? And what are you doing, and what do
you want me to do?"
"I call it an ignition analyzer," Gus said, "I'm
making a wooden box, 4" square and 2 1/2" deep, out of 1 1/2" stuff.
Here's a job for you," He handed Dr. Marvin a 1" long piece of 1/4" brass
rod, and a large file. "Just file one side of that until you have a
1/2" flat surface on it, will you?"
They worked for a while in a companionable silence
and an ever-thickening cloud of pipe smoke. Gus finished his box, and
to one side of it screwed a 1/2" square block of wood. To this block
he screwed a 1" by 1/2" strip of 1/4" metal threaded near its upper end to
take an 8-32 machine screw. Then he went over to the other side of the
shop and began to rummage through a big box in which he keeps a collection
of old car parts. Finding what he was looking for, he came back to the
workbench just as Dr. Marvin finished his filing job.
He held up the object that he had salvaged from
what his partner, Joe Clark, contemptuously calls the junk box. "This
is an old windshield fan motor," he said, "but it works all right."
“You can buy a new one in any accessory store. The motor from one of those
old motor-driven horns will do just as well, if you happen to have one
around your garage. Now I'll drill a hole through that piece of brass
rod you've been filing so industriously ...so. And now I'll fasten it
with a machine screw to the threaded hole I put in the end of the motor
shaft ...so. Now that will be all right."
"I wish," Dr. Marvin said, "you'd tell me what the
devil you're driving at!" Gus grinned widely.
"Patience is a virtue.. I'll bet you've pulled that line many a time, Doc.
Just wait until I've finished up a couple of other little jobs and I'll tell
you all about it." He screwed the fan motor directly to the bottom of
the box, with its shaft pointing upward. Then he attached a metal top
to the box, through which the piece of flattened brass rod fastened to the
end of the shaft protruded, its lower edge a scant 1/4" above it. Then
he took an 8-32 machine screw, filed its end to a point, and screwed it
through the strip of metal he had fastened to the wooden block he had
screwed to the outside of the box. "There you are!" he said.
"The Gus Wilson Ignition Analyzer, all ready to analyze!"
Dr. Marvin examined the gadget carefully, and then
shook his head. "It just doesn't make sense to me," he admitted.
Gus laughed. "It will," he said. "If you'll drive your car in,
Doc, and park it as close to the bench as you can, this little instrument
will tell you exactly what has gone wrong with your ignition system, without
you having to move away from this bench."
Dr. Marvin drove his car in and stopped it close to
the bench. Gus raised the hood took off the distributor cap, unscrewed
the head plate which carried the points and condenser, removed it, and then
mounted it on the metal top of the analyzer box as shown in the drawing.
"You'll notice," he said, "that the flattened brass rod takes the place of
the cam used in the car to open the points. When the motor of the
analyzer is rotating, the points will open once with every revolution of the
motor's shaft."
He took the ignition coil out of the car, placed it
on the bench, and connected it to the analyzer, the wire from the coil's
high-tension terminal running to the head of the pointed machine screw.
"This is important," he said as he adjusted the screw carefully.
"There must be a gap of exactly 1/2" between the point of the screw and the
metal plate on the top of the box." Then he connected the analyzer to the
car's frame for a ground.
"When I start the motor," he explained, "we should
get a spark across that gap between the point of the screw and the metal top
of the box. Watch that spark, Doc. It will tell us the whole
story. If it jumps right across the gap and is fat and blue-white,
there's nothing wrong with your ignition system. If the spark doesn't
jump the gap, or isn't fat and blue-white, then there's something wrong-and
the spark will tell us what it is. Let's go." He
switched on the tiny electric motor. The spark jumped the gap, all
right, but it wasn't fat and blue-white. It was stringy, and reddish
in color. Gus watched it for a few seconds, and then switched off the
motor.
"Thought so," he said. "The trouble is an
open circuit in the coil's secondary winding. That's what's been
causing those hard starts and the stalling in traffic that you told me
about. There's only one sensible remedy Doc, a new coil. No
sense fooling with this one. Sooner or later the 'open' will become
longer, and then your engine won't start at all."
"All right," Dr. Marvin said. "Put in a new coil.
Have you got one on hand?" Gus nodded. "Before I put
it in your car," he said, "we'll test it out on the analyzer."
Gus soon came back from the stock room with the new
coil and connected it to the analyzer in place of the old one. Then he
switched on the electric motor again. The spark began to jump the gap
with a peppery crack-crack-crunch-a spark that was fat and hot and
blue-white. They watched it for a half minute, and then Gus switched
off the analyzer motor.
"Well," Dr. Marvin said, "your ignition analyzer
has proved to my satisfaction that I needed a new coil, and I haven't the
slightest doubt that the new coil will do away with the trouble I've been
having. That's all to the good. But suppose the trouble had been
caused by something else. How would your analyzer have shown it up then?"
Gus perched his large frame on his workbench.
"To tell you what you want to know, I'll have to sound off for a few
minutes." He grinned cheerfully. "Well, now, the main thing to
keep in mind is that when the analyzer produces a fat, blue-white spare
which jumps the full half-inch gap, there's not a thing wrong with your
ignition system, but when the analyzer doesn't produce that kind of spark,
there is something wrong with your ignition system.
"Suppose you start the analyzer motor, and the
resulting spark is fat and blue-white, but doesn't jump more than 1/4".
That shows that your coil has started turns in its secondary. The
sensible remedy is the same as for a coil with an open circuit in its
secondary-a new coil.
"Sometimes you get a fat, blue-white spark which is
a full 1/2" long, but which misses now and then. That sort of spark
makes an engine stall while it's starting, and is the cause of poor
acceleration and of backfiring. The trouble is a coil which 'opens'
intermittently. The remedy is the same, a new coil,
but before you buy one, check on your condenser. A condenser that's in bad
shape will cause an intermittent miss. Also, a short, weak spark usually is
caused by a poor condenser, or one of the wrong capacity. Until you've
had a good deal of trouble-shooting experience, it's a good idea to suspect
the condenser first and the coil second.
"Poor condensers cause a lot of distributor-point
grief, too. They're often the underlying cause of an engine being hard
on points, and they're the most common cause of burned points. "Even if your
coil and condenser are in good shape, you can't get the most out of your
ignition system unless the distributor points are perfectly spaced. If
the points are set too close they'll cause hard starting. Using the
ignition analyzer, you can determine the best point-spacing for your car by
carefully adjusting the points while the tester motor is running until you
get the fattest, longest spark possible on the tester with steady firing.
When you replace the distributor head plate, set the points to exactly that
gap, and you'll get the highest possible ignition efficiently... Well,
what do you think of my ignition analyzer?"
"I think," Dr. Marvin said, "that it's a darned
interesting and darned useful gadget, and I'm going to make one the first
evening that I can get to myself."