Randy, here is a thread on the subject.
http://fyi.boardhost.com/viewtopic.php?id=1382 It seems to me that little is changed resistor wire in the circuit wise, from 64 to 69. Is my assumption correct?
When my tach went out I called this company for repair information.
http://speedocheckca.com/instrument-clusters/4648424 Mike the owner quoted me 200 and the better part of a week for the turn around so I dropped it off. The next day he called and said it was ready and that the bill was 90. I believe the horseshoe failed instead of the usual fried guts. A horseshoe is instrument repair lingo for the transformer since it resembles a horseshoe.
I'm beginning to suspect that an over voltage event fries the tach. Jump starting another car or the voltage regulator is bad or the battery is soft shorting for example.
Mike said that he thinks it's safe on the tach to sample the current flow in the primary circuit and that we have 6 volt coils. I studied conventional ignition system design and it's a evolved electrical engineering art form. The coil does the work and ford yellow tops are the best. After my friend re-curved my distributor we spun it up on his machine and at 6000 RPM crank the radar looking blips lined up perfectly.
"If I bought the best aftermarket distributor available would I gain an improvement, performance wise?" I asked him.
"No, you can see that yours is doing the job as good as it can be done. If you get into 12 to 1 compression you may need a hotter spark so in that event you may need to upgrade" he said.
The condenser is in series with the points as we know. When the points break collapsing the primary coil flux field the condenser sets up a different flux field of some type, there are numerous opinions on which type of field it is, which wrings out all the voltage out of the primary side of the coil to the secondary side for a hotter spark. The polarity of the collapsing primary coil field can be observed on the points since there is a hole on one point face and a mound on the other point face, we have all see that. Points with a hole in the center of both point faces is a evolved design for increased longevity. The violent point break is part of the hot spark discharge at higher RPM duty which is one reason petronics is not worthwhile in my opinion.
Don't invite me over to your house to shoot the breeze with open mustang hoods if you have a petronic system because when you go inside the house to get more beers it will be in the trash when you come back, I can't help it.
I have a GM resistor wire in the green asbestos jacket and I'll run some tests on it under the load of a auxiliary radiator fan and report what I find as well as the current flow of the positive side of the coil on my mustang. Thanks Randy and the rest of you guys!