
07-22-2004, 10:38 AM
|
|
Banned
|
|
|
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Yorba Linda,
CA
Cobra Make, Engine: SPF w/392CI stroker
Posts: 3,293
|
|
Not Ranked
Mr Magoo,
I believe the MSD (or other brands of high energy ignitions) is an important component, especially if you are running a radical camshaft and/or high compression. But like with any other bolt-ons, the gains from an MSD ignition are much greater when combined with a suite of other parts. For example, having a magnetic trigger ignition and high energy coil will augment the "box" (unit).
You can install the unit on the passenger shelf (top of the foot box) under the hood. Installation is pretty straight forward and MSD provides a very thorough instruction booklet that shows you how to wire it for various configurations.
A big downfall with the MSD-type ignitions is that you can get stranded if the unit goes bad. There are some here that keep a points distributor in their tool bag just in case (!). Depending on your set-up, there are situations where you don't have an alternative to "wire it up" differently in an emergency. I believe some of the other manufacturers (Crane and Jacobs) have come up with better designs that alleviate this problem...check other units out to make sure and do your homework.
One other consideration you need to be aware of is that some tachometers are not set-up to receive the proper tach signal from an MSD box. They sell a tach adapter to overcome this (about $45-50). I happen to have one for sale if you're interested (I ended up installing it but later learned that I really didn't need it after all). It has zero miles on it.
I'm sure some others will chime in here about the pros/cons of running the MSD and/or other brand high energy ignitions. I like the satisfaction of knowing that I'm always getting a very hot spark, and with the lopey roller camshaft that I'm running I need all the fire I can get.
-Deano
|