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Old 09-03-2015, 08:57 PM   #11
chuchito
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Join Date: Aug 2013
Location: Davenport, Florida
Posts: 44
Question Re: 68 C10 Yellow wire from firewall to starter/coil.

Quote:
Originally Posted by VetteVet View Post
The GM coils are not designed to run full time on 12 volts like the HEI distributors, so the pre HEI ignitions used this wire with a resistance built into it to reduce the 12 volts from the key switch down to 8.5 to 9 volts for normal engine running. The engineers realized that it would be better to start the engines with a hotter spark so they tied into the yellow wire from the starter solenoid to provide a full 12 volts to the coil when starting.

With the introduction of the HEI ignitions the resistance wire and the yellow wire were no longer needed so they removed them on the 74 models. A lot of the guys when they make the conversions to HEI use this wire and soon find out that their trucks don't run very good and don't relate it to the lower voltage that the resistance wire provides. That is why a new wire needs to be run from a keyed full 12 volt source such as you have. It is possible to just remove the resistance wire from the bulkhead connector and run the new wire from there since it is 12 volts ahead of the bulkhead connector.

Here's a couple of diagrams for the readers. The first one shows the stock wiring and the resistance wire is orange/purple from the bulkhead connector and where it joins the yellow wire that goes to the coil.

Attachment 718651

This is the HEI wire

Attachment 718652
Vettevet, I have been looking all over for info on this subject. Everyone talks about the wire with the resistor and says to replace with a different wire from the terminal block to connect to HEI but it gets confusing on what to do with the yellow wires that tee off with the resistor wire. Everyone makes it seem that there is a yellow wire directly to the original coil from the terminal block. The fact is that the resistor wire goes from the terminal block to a splice where it then transitions into two yellow wires. At least it does on my 72 GMC Suburban. My suburban has HEI and has not run in a few years since working on the body work. I'm trying to get it running and needed to know where those two yellow wires go. Since reading this post, I now know that one goes to the original coil which is not needed anymore but I was stuck on what to do with the second yellow wire. Whether to connect it to the starter or not. Your explanation makes the most sense of all posts I've read. So you are saying that I don't need to connect neither of the yellow wires; one to the original coil, since it is gone, nor the one to the starter. Is this correct?
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