Well it's a "circle." Increasing duty cycle at the points changes the current through the system, and this changes the heat in the ballast. That's why it's called a ballast. It changes resistance with heat.
The thing is there is multiple reasons
Damage to the points is one aspect
The other thing is, the fact that there is a resistor, means, that if you bypass the resistor during start, then you maintain a fairly hot spark for starting. The coil COULD have been designed to eliminate the ballast, but then you would have a weaker spark during cranking
So far as I know, the "big change" was with GM HEI. It incorporates internal dwell control, and so far as I know was the first system without a ballast.
In the 70's my cousin had a Jeep with the ? Prestolite factory system that AMC used. One day he came into the store and bought an ECU. He asked me if I knew why the thing "ate" brain boxes. I asked "HIM" if any of the kids left the key on sometimes. "Just to listen to the radio." I said "You mean they turn the key ON?" Turns out he himself was guilty........did not know the difference between accessory and "run." I guess that thing "ate" about 3 ECUs before he got wise.
The point? These systems were sometimes not very well engineered. Breaker points systems are not the only one that can be damaged by carelessness.
The thing is there is multiple reasons
Damage to the points is one aspect
The other thing is, the fact that there is a resistor, means, that if you bypass the resistor during start, then you maintain a fairly hot spark for starting. The coil COULD have been designed to eliminate the ballast, but then you would have a weaker spark during cranking
So far as I know, the "big change" was with GM HEI. It incorporates internal dwell control, and so far as I know was the first system without a ballast.
In the 70's my cousin had a Jeep with the ? Prestolite factory system that AMC used. One day he came into the store and bought an ECU. He asked me if I knew why the thing "ate" brain boxes. I asked "HIM" if any of the kids left the key on sometimes. "Just to listen to the radio." I said "You mean they turn the key ON?" Turns out he himself was guilty........did not know the difference between accessory and "run." I guess that thing "ate" about 3 ECUs before he got wise.
The point? These systems were sometimes not very well engineered. Breaker points systems are not the only one that can be damaged by carelessness.















