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Technical My car has an HEI, can I ask a tech question here?

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by Terranova, Jul 5, 2017.

  1. Terranova
    Joined: May 13, 2008
    Posts: 89

    Terranova
    Member

    I know HEIs aren't exactly period correct...
     
  2. 5window
    Joined: Jan 29, 2005
    Posts: 9,548

    5window
    Member

    Oh, no, no no. Ask your question. Then maybe the mods will let is stay-or maybe someone will answer before it is deleted.. No one knows if your question is okay until you ask it!
     
    elcamino59 and HellsHotRods like this.
  3. Terranova
    Joined: May 13, 2008
    Posts: 89

    Terranova
    Member

    Driving my dads '34 "Chevy in a Ford" coupe and the motor/juice just dies about a mile from the house. (Enough time to get up to temp etc). Older battery we've been limping along. Had to get it jumped. Get back to the house and it dies pulling into the garage.
    About a week and a half later I go buy a new battery, cause I figure it's time. Put the new one in. Take it for a spin. (Not as far this time ;-) ) and the same thing happens, only this time ,because the battery is fresh, I turn off the key, turn it back on and she jumps back up and I drive off. Happens a second time on the way home, only this time I'm running down a hill so I'm coasting, slip her into neutral, turn the key off and on, hit the starter and she jumps back up again and I make it home.

    Running all the things through my brain,
    as long as the key stayed on after it died, there was no juice
    Second session, if I turned the ignition off and back on, the juice would come back up and it would start right up.

    Can't be vapor lock, it starts right back up.
    It's got fuel, it's got air, it's gotta be electrical, right?
    Voltmeter says it's charging aroun 12-14 while running in motion.

    Can the guts in my HEI be crapping out?
    Could it be something to do with the temp relay for my electric push fan? (I know, sin number two). Could it be that when the car gets up to temp and the fan tries to kick on that something happens to kill the juice? Electrical is not my strong point obviously.

    Any feed back would be greatly appreciated.
    Thanks guys
    Terranova
     
  4. rtp
    Joined: Aug 14, 2007
    Posts: 221

    rtp
    Member

    Hei module going bad . just happened to me a few months ago just like you describe.

    Sent from my VS987 using The H.A.M.B. mobile app
     

  5. Terranova
    Joined: May 13, 2008
    Posts: 89

    Terranova
    Member

    Thanks man, appreciate it. I gotta do more reading up on the HEI thing. My dads buddies decided it was more reliable for my 70 year old dad when we built it.

    Thanks again T
     
  6. I'm thinking you should drive it let it die. Don't touch anything. Get stopped safely. Don't touch anything. Raise the hood take the test light and see if you have power on the red wire feeding the HEI. No power. Go back inside turn the key off and back on. Check the red wire. If it has power I m thinking it's the switch. That's just my opinion and it didn't cost you a dime.
     
  7. loudbang and tonkadawg like this.
  8. partssaloon
    Joined: Jan 28, 2009
    Posts: 680

    partssaloon
    Member

    Mine did that and I put in a new ignition switch and it hasn't done it since.
     
  9. El Caballo
    Joined: Mar 3, 2001
    Posts: 6,299

    El Caballo
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    "Chevy in a Ford"
    Organ rejection, it happens...
     
    Truck64, Auslander, slim38 and 12 others like this.
  10. Fat47
    Joined: Nov 10, 2007
    Posts: 1,461

    Fat47
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    325's advice is where you should start. While the module may be going bad, I also would start with the ignition switch check to make sure you are getting constant power to the HEI. May be as simple as a wire loose or frayed. Follow the current into the ignition and then back out to the HEI.
     
  11. gimpyshotrods
    Joined: May 20, 2009
    Posts: 23,330

    gimpyshotrods
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    I, as well, would recommend looking at everything in the circuit that powers and grounds the module. HEI modules are fairly robust. That is not to say that they don't go bad, but there are/were literally millions of them in-service. I even have one on my 6-cylinder Falcon. Not exactly super famous for being hella fragile.
     
    triman62 likes this.
  12. 3quarter32
    Joined: Dec 10, 2010
    Posts: 503

    3quarter32
    Member

    Same thing happened to a buds car out on the turnpike. I had a ice chest with me. Put a baggie of ice on the distributor. Made it another 60 miles to parts store. Might be a good way to check out the HEI.
     
  13. Kerrynzl
    Joined: Jun 20, 2010
    Posts: 2,963

    Kerrynzl
    Member

    Caused by hot-air blowing over the engine block and cooking the Dizzy, you need to swap in an engine with a front mounted dizzy :D

    A faulty coil would cause the same symptons.
    Does your car have a Tacho?
    An ignition feed issue or a faulty module will cause the Tacho to flicker
     
    loudbang and RICH B like this.
  14. Get a voltmeter and temporarily connect it to the positive feed on the distributor, and mount it inside the cabin (just leave it on the floor). Keep an eye on it when this all happens, it will tell you wether its the switch or the distributor.
     
    millelacsrick likes this.
  15. RMONTY
    Joined: Jan 7, 2016
    Posts: 2,540

    RMONTY
    Member

    I wanna see that "Chevy in a Ford".....
     
  16. Atwater Mike
    Joined: May 31, 2002
    Posts: 11,624

    Atwater Mike
    Member

    Most ALL Fords have Chevies in 'em. Couple of mine do...
     
    bobss396 and Montana1 like this.
  17. The five in my garage sure as hell don't ;)
     
    loudbang, 2R10Don and BamaMav like this.
  18. HEI and other electronic items fail in strange ways.
    Sometimes they act fine until they "warm up".

    QUICK TIP - if you want to make an HEI module last a whole lot longer, MOVE IT TO A COOL LOCATION.
    I got tired of changing HEI modules every few years, sometimes in a far away parking lot.
    Once I located my new module under my dash inside the car by running wires from the distributor with the idea that I wouldn't have to climb under the hood to change it next time.
    In that cooler location I haven't had an HEI failure in over 15 years.

    why be ordinary?
     
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  19. poncho catalina
    Joined: Sep 22, 2008
    Posts: 87

    poncho catalina
    Member
    from summit il

    The first thing I would check is the pick up pole.( some call it pick up coil). Check the wires that go to the module, over time they get brittle and break inside the insulation. If you pull on the wire you will feel the break or it will break all the way through. When the vacuum advance moves it stretches the wire and breaks the connection. Then when you lose vacuum it moves back and that is why it will start again.
    Try brake torque and see if the ign breaks up and start to miss under load
    This was common back in the 70s and 80s before ecm controlled the advance
    If is good then replace the module and coil as a set.
     
    triman62 likes this.
  20. By the way, I used to build HEI distributors for AMC, JEEP, Packard, Studebaker,....
    I even shipped a boxful of HEIs built for Hudsons to Clifford Performance years ago.
    The weak area is in the module not getting enough cooling.
    Move the module to a cool place and they last a long long time.

    My daily driver is still running an HEI I built for it over 25 yrs ago.
    Keep it cool. :)
    photo - it will light up a room if you want it to. :)

    P.S. my Suzuki hot rod bike uses two hei modules and high output coils as does my ski boat :)

    [​IMG]

    why be ordinary?
     
    Last edited: Jul 5, 2017
    hendelec likes this.
  21. triman62
    Joined: Sep 2, 2013
    Posts: 277

    triman62
    Member

    Lots of good ideas already mentioned, one more, if it has a tach that shorts when hot it will ground out signal, Unplug tach from dist. and drive for test.
     
    Truckdoctor Andy likes this.
  22. There was no juice where..and how do we know this?
     
  23. poncho catalina
    Joined: Sep 22, 2008
    Posts: 87

    poncho catalina
    Member
    from summit il

    Good point Mark yac
    I missed that
     
  24. henry's57bbwagon
    Joined: Sep 12, 2008
    Posts: 680

    henry's57bbwagon
    Member

    Very closely inspect the wires inside the dist as the insulation cracks and can short it out. Also wires at the module crack and break which disrupts the voltage to/ from it.
     
  25. Doctorterry
    Joined: Sep 12, 2015
    Posts: 686

    Doctorterry
    Member

    This happened to my '62 Chevy.. please cut me some slack with how stupid I'm about to look with my lack of correct terms but the little "nipple" in the center of the cap that the rotor turns on was broke...


    Sent from my iPhone using H.A.M.B.
     
    loudbang likes this.
  26. Doctorterry
    Joined: Sep 12, 2015
    Posts: 686

    Doctorterry
    Member

    loudbang likes this.
  27. Two things not covered are...
    Sometimes the rotors have a hole burned through the center.
    I was told by a mechanic older than my 50 age, that when spark plug wires get old and build resistance, the HEI module has a tendency to break down.
    To the naysayers, just like the old days to use an ohm meter to check for resistance and continuity breakdown. Simple troubleshooting.
    I'd rather see a car built in our favor by somebody that cares, than to see the crusher send it out as scrap. $$$$ drives many a build, including mine.
     
    Last edited: Jul 5, 2017
  28. 5window
    Joined: Jan 29, 2005
    Posts: 9,548

    5window
    Member

    See? There you go. Lots of good folks on the HAMB
     
    Kan Kustom and Steve Ray like this.
  29. Chiss
    Joined: May 12, 2017
    Posts: 236

    Chiss
    Member
    from S.C.

    Well I was going to suggest the Ford was Trying to take a dump and Pass that Chevy Trash.........
     
  30. GreaserJosh13
    Joined: May 27, 2013
    Posts: 583

    GreaserJosh13
    Member
    from Chino




    Sent from my iPhone using H.A.M.B.
     

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