Dahlstan wrote:Oh my lord! I just bought a 1978 Spider and I've been having issues with the car starting. It just so happens that my car has the same ignition switch that is wired to the engine coil. I have the Lada type ignition switch as well, do you have any suggestions on how I can diagnose if it the kill switch or the ignition switch that is the problem? When I directly wired the ignition coil to the car battery it started perfectly, but without the two connected it just turns and turns. thank you!
I don't have a wiring diagram for a '78 spider, but I'm guessing it's similar to earlier years. If that's the case, there should be a light blue/black wire connected to terminal 15 on the back of the ignition switch. When the key is in the RUN or START position, terminal 15 (and thus the light blue/black wire) should have 12V on it. This is the power for the ignition coil, so check to make sure you're getting power there. Safety tip: Make sure the car is in neutral before turning to START while you're working on it.
If terminal 15 has power in RUN and START, then the problem lies between there and the B+ terminal on the ignition coil. Make sure it has power in both RUN and START, not just one or the other. Could be a break in the wiring, someone installed a kill switch, bad connection, etc.
If terminal 15 does not have power in RUN or START, then check the power at terminal 30/1 which should have a large black wire attached to it. If terminal 30/1 has power (but terminal 15 doesn't), then you have an internal problem with the ignition switch. If terminal 30/1 does not have power, since this large black wire connects directly to the alternator output, then there's an issue somewhere with that wire. Note that terminal 30/1 (and the large black wire) will have +12V all the time, that is, it doesn't matter which position the key is in.
-Bryan