It was a ’73 German Capri V-6. Neat car. I was southbound in rush hour traffic on Route 95 in Norwood, MA, right under the Neponset Street bridge, if you must know. I was in the passing lane doing about what everybody else in the passing lane was doing, 70 or more.
Suddenly, no power and the tach needle dropped to zero. The other electrics were ok. Somehow folks figured out why I had my flashers on, and gave me a path to coast to the shoulder.
Coasting to a stop, I had pretty much diagnosed that my aftermarket Delta electronic ignition had croaked, so as soon as I stopped, I popped the hood, and pushed the little bypass button that switches back to stock. That was easy. I’m outta here.
Nope, the car would not restart. So I rechecked the wiring on the terminal block where I patched the Delta wiring into the stock wires, the tightness of the terminals on the coil, distributor wires, all of that. No problems, but it still wouldn’t start. What’s wrong with this picture?
Then I noticed a slight rubber burning type smell, and followed my nose. Oh, there it is. The Capri had a long wire from the distributor to the coil, located on the inner fender. In the middle of this wire was a rather substantial rubber shielded connector, and the whole wire was unsupported, swinging in the breeze. It had fatigued to the point where it broke off, and the rubber connector was lying on the exhaust manifold.
After that it was easy. I’m an EE, and had a bit of spare wire in the trunk, so a little splicing, and I was on my way.
And then there was the time when my 5 speed Jetta transmission suddenly decided to only shift into a couple gears, and I fixed it on the roadside with a bungee cord. But that’s another story.
Stu