could be where your wiring harness goes connects to the fire wall or the ignition switch when it is in the start position not putting voltage to the coil . one way to check this is to put a jumpier wire from the battery to the coil and try to start if it does it could be one of the above
Is Dist. turning? Voltage tester start at one end or the other and make sure there's power. Wire to coil grounded. Pickup in distributer. Electrical is always interesting.
If the electrical box is grounded, check with a tester, the "hot" wire will have a voltage to the the grounded box the neutral wire will not. If the box is not grounded, with the breaker supplying the voltage turned off, use a tester on the resistance scale to check for continuity between the wires and a cold water pipe or some other grounded medium. The neutral will have continuity between the wire and a ground the "hot" wire will not.
A voltage tester is a popular tool with electricians. A voltage tester determines if there is a current running through a wire and determines if the current needs grounding.
use a voltage tester to see if there is voltage at the base pin
Not correctly , It will show on a tester that it is grounded but you should run a separate ground for it to be properly grounded
The highest voltage scale on a hand held multimeter is 5000 volts.
D. Neon circuit tester. Page # 59 in your book.
No. A megger's output voltage is not high enough to test the insulation of a high-voltage transformer if, by 'high-voltage transformer ', you mean a distribution transformer or power transformer. Instead, a high-voltage test set or 'pressure tester' (e.g. a 'HiPot' tester) must be used, as these produce far higher voltages.
just a digital voltage meter measure at the origin, and then at the end of line
Voltage source
with a kohler regulator tester
No