
Re: Pertronix Equivalent
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Re: Pertronix Equivalent
- From: "Stephen Andrachek" <s.andrachek@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 11 Aug 2011 16:43:30 -0400
Note: When I first tried to send this email I got a message telling me one
or more pictures would not show up in the sent email and asked me to send it
or not. Since I don't know what picture is screwed up, I'm sending it out.
The links are there even if the picture or pictures are not. The pictures
ARE at the links I provided.
Davis Unified Ignition sells a distributor with the coil built into the top
of the distributor. I bought one for my '62 Dodge but it is a very tall
distributor and the '62's hood slopes down so much that the distributor
wouldn't fit under the hood. Although I had the distributor for over a year
(waiting on a useless engine man to get moving on my engine) D.U.I. (as they
are also called) told me to send it back in the original box and they would
refund all my money. And they did. They are from Tennessee and all their
stuff is made in the U.S.A. They also make the finest spark plug wires I
have ever seen and I bought a set of them and I'm not sorry I did.
They also sell a tiny "Dyna Bat" battery that weighs 13.5 lbs. and will
crank your engine just as good as a big battery that weighs 3 times as much.
I have one in my car. Last year I locked up my garage after taking a ride
and my brake light switch sticks and I didn't notice it. The next time I
went to the garage to take my car out the battery was dead. So I took it
out of the car and it was November so I kept the battery in the house.
In the spring I borrowed my friends car-fixing kind of place big battery
charger. I hooked up my battery to the charger and guess what? The battery
showed a normal charge and it did indeed have a full charge in it. I never
used a trickle charger or anything to charge that battery after it went dead
and I'm still amazed that it rejuvinated itself just by sitting for a while.
This battery is full of gel and sealed. It is only $120 and comes complete
with a mounting bracket. I did the brake light thing again and again the
battery, though completely dead, rejuvinated itself in a few weeks. I don't
know how they do that, but they do.
Below is the distributor with the built-in coil.
Here's a link to the companies "work" page where they hook up one of their
distributors and test it and a whole lot more info:
http://www.streetlegaltv.com/forum/d-u-i-street-strip-distributor-5593.html
Here's a link to D.U.I.'s main page:
http://www.performancedistributors.com/ You have to scroll down to the
bottom of the page and click on what kind of engine you have and on what
product you wish to review.
Here's a picture of the DynaBat battery. You can choose any of three
terminal styles. Here's a link to the Dyna-Batt:
http://www.performancedistributors.com/batteries.htm
Here's a picture of a Mopar distributor. They make them for small blocks,
big blocks and one for a Hemi. They come in 4 or 5 colors and so do their
"live wire" spark plug wires. They make 2 different kinds of distributors,
one with a coil built into the top of the distributor and one with a
conventional separate coil. Now get this. You tell D.U.I. what curve you
want in your distributor and they do it for you. I am talking about degrees
of advance. One distributor degree equals two crankshaft degrees. Let's
say you have a car that needs either a lot of initial timing to start your
car. You can set your initial timing at 20 degrees or whatever you need.
Then you tell D.U.I. to put an eight degree curve in your distributor.
Thirty six degrees is generally considered max or near max (total timing
from distributor and initial timing added together. If 20 degrees initial
timing is no good for your engine for starting purposes, have them put 10 or
12 degrees advance in your distributor which would give you 20 or 24 degrees
of advance from the distributor. Then, to get your engine to 36 degrees
total timing (or whatever you need) all you have to do is to set your
initial timing at idle to either 16 or 12 degrees of timing and bingo!, your
engine will now have that 36 degrees of total timing.
Here's the one with the separate coil.
Here are the ones with a built-in coil. The "click here" doesn't work on
the pics in this email. You have to be on their web site to get results
from the "click here" line.
Here's a link to the "live wires":
http://www.performancedistributors.com/livewire.htm
You tell them what color you want, the length you want for each cylinder and
they mark that cable with the cylinder number for you. You can also specify
what angle you want on both ends of each wire. You might want three plug
wires with a straight end on the spark plug end, two plug wires with a 90
degree bend on the spark plug end and maybe three plug wires with a 45
degree bend on the spark plug end. On top of that, you can also specify
what ends you want on the distributor end too. You can get it coming
straight out of the wire or you can get the distributor end with a 90 degree
bend in it. If you manage to burn up a wire, they will sell you just one
wire. Or two wires. Whatever you want. Here's what they look like:
Obviously, if you are building a car that you want to look as stock as
possible then this is not the stuff you want. On the other hand, if you are
building a street rod where you keep the car looking pretty much stock on
the outside, this equipment is highly recommended.
This company stands by its products. I bought a kit for my PT Cruiser from
them which included a set of "live wires" and a high performance coil. Then
I added a good low-restriction air filter. Then I raced my friends
turbocharged PT Cruiser. My car is a stick shift, my friend's car is an
automatic. I pulled out quickly and feathered the clutch so I didn't spin
much tire. I think I had three car lengths on my friend before his wheels
turned over once. Then I thought at about the halfway point (1/4 mile race)
that he would come blowing past me. That never happened. I put so many car
length's on him that I couldn't count them. My car is not turbo or
supercharged. The right equipment can make up for a weakness somewhere
else.
Besides Hughs Engineering, Mancini's and Dvorak's places which are all Mopar
all the time, this company thinks very highly of its customers and will bend
over backwards to keep you happy.
Lastly, here is a picture of my engine with the live wires. I got red ones
and powder-coated the caps that cover the crossram intake bolts red too. The
block is black, the heads and water pump are silver and the intake is black.
Note the billet plug wire separator just to the right of the valve cover.
They come with either 2, 3 or 4 holes. I have some of each on each side of
the engine. Also sold by D.U.I.
Hope this info helps you and/or others.
Chick
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