Hi everyone! This is my first time posting here, and it's probably going to be a bit of a novel, so sorry about the length. A few weeks ago I bought an '87 eagle wagon from a fellow who had found it in a garage. Apparently the previous owner had passed away, leaving it to his wife. His wife then sold it to the guy I bought it from. Based on the inspection stickers on the windshield, it hasn't been on the road since 08-09.
I've been working on trying to get the car started the last few weekends "(Weekend" for me btw means Sunday and Monday, I work in Retail and after much bargaining with mgmt that's as close to a weekend as I could get
). First I did all the normal tune up things:Battery, Plugs, wires, dizzy cap and rotor, fuel filter and I changed the oil (even though the guy I bought it form had changed it already). The guy I got it from had also already drained the tank so I put about 5 gallons of fresh 93 octane in. Upon trying to start it, I found that no fuel was getting to the carb (dry filter) , so I took off the fuel line to the tank and attached a small piece of hose in its place going to a container of gas under the hood. Still no fuel. So I replaced the fuel pump with an OEM carter unit that I bought on amazon with all the tune up stuff, just because I figured I might need it. I cranked it over a few times and I now I have fuel flow.
Also, upon changing the plugs, I found that the #5 plug to be very badly damaged, it almost looked like it had exploded and the electrode was completely gone. So i fished around with a magnet on a stick and removed as much debris as I could, then used a shop vac with a piece of aquarium hose attached to try and remove anything else. After all that I left the #5 plug out and tried to start the engine (figuring if it did start, it might blow any remaining pieces of spark plug out the plug hole). It backfired and sputtered and burped a few times and tried to start, but didn't. with the plug out I checked for spark, it was weak, yellow and very intermittent. I checked it at the coil and found the same thing. Noticing that the coil was an OEM part (stamped AMC), I figured that was the problem so I ordered a new one. It was also at this time that I noticed the Ignition module was very warm.
Fast forward to yesterday, I install the new coil and now the spark is gone, entirely. I try to crank over the engine and I get no backfires or sputters at all. I feel the ignition module and it's cold, not like it had been. I swap the old coil on and have the exact same result. So I pull the ignition module and find that the epoxy potting on the back has two very pronounced scorch marks, so it looks like I roached it.
After a little trouble finding the right part at my local Advance Auto Parts (my Eagle has the ignition module with the '88 style connectors so the part listed for '87 didn't fit and they don't have have '88 Eagle in their computer so I asked for one from an 88 Wrangler, which ended up being the right part but for some reason cost $40 more) I install a new module and a new ignition solenoid while I'm at it. With lots of shiny new parts bolted to the Passenger-side fender I try to start the Eagle again. It makes probably the best effort so far, lots of sputters and pops and backfiring, but it just doesn't catch.
So today, after letting the the trickle charger do its thing over night, I come out and give it another go. My neighbor across the street offers to help and we hook up some jumper cables from his truck so the battery doesn't die, figuring a few extra cold cranking amps couldn't hurt. We give it a few good tries and a few sprays with starter fluid and the result is still the same, pops, burps, backfires and sputters, except this time smoke starts coming out of the split loom wiring conduit that goes up along the passenger side fender into the cabin. I pull the conduit off, and only one wire is hot: a red wire with a green stripe that goes from the starter solenoid to the firewall. According to my FSM it looks like this wire eventually provides extra juice to the coil after going through some sort of resistor.
So that's where I'm at now. I think the problem may be the resistor is bad causing that cable to have too much resistance on it which is then causing the spark problem. does anybody know how to get at the resistor (FSM isn't too helpful in that regard) or is it safe to bypass it completely?
I also have another hypothesis: The starter on this car sounds weak to me. This is my first AMC, I've only ever really worked on fords prior to this, but the starter just sounds kind off to me, like it's not turning the motor fast enough. Could it be possible that the Starter is just pulling too many amps, thereby starving the coil while simultaneously not turning the motor fast enough to fire?
Also, Luna the dog says hi. She apparently likes watching me work.