I have owned a few 67 - 68 Mustangs and Cougars that had resistance wires which were still operating but absolutely charred from too much current. These cars all had aftermarket Mallory coils, the big rectangular ones that were so popular in the days before MSD. Some of my friends also used the gigantic Accel coils. There were other brands back then too. Any of these aftermarket coils have a lower resistance than a stock yellow top coil, which increases current in the resistance wire because it is in series with the coil. The proper way to use one would be to bypass the resistance wire and of course any factory tach, and use a ceramic resistor that could take the higher current without melting.
Of course back then we were all bulletproof and invisible and knew more than the instructions in the box.
I don't think that Ford expected many failures of the resistance wire as it is permanently bonded to the connector. If it was subjected to failure, there would have been a short lead with a single bullet type connector to mate with another bullet type connector that was part of the resistance wire. I've seen only one Mustang with an external resistor mounted on the firewall, obviously to replace a bad resistance wire. A replacement wire is sold by Mustang (and others) vendors, so maybe it does fail.
I'm keeping my fingers crossed.
Jim