OT - a cool ol' Ford script coil
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Here is a pic of a old wooden coil with the Ford script on it. Thought some one may like to see...
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Any idea what it is from?
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No! My Mom gave me them, one loose and one is attached to a lamp.
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Maybe an old model T? These look pretty similar:
Model T Coil Box Original Ford Script | eBay Vintage Ford Model T Ignition Coil - C500 - eBay (item 260833677335 end time Aug-17-11 08:18:42 PDT) Here's a reproduction that looks close: Model T Coil | Model T Ford Coil | Ford Motel T Coils |
Yeah, it's an old Model T coil. I've seen them with and without the script brand. And by brand, I mean actually burnt and branded right into the wood. I have one of the script ones like that, as well. I keep it on my desk. ;-)
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A Model T indeed. For being 100-year-old technology, those old wooden buzz-box coils really pack a wallop! They'll throw a big, fat, evil blue spark like no modern hi-po coil I've ever seen. Non-stop, too! One of those with a switch and a 6-volt battery make a pretty effective security system.
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Is that a coil, or a magneto? Since Model T's did not have batteries...it's a magneto.
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last one I saw was years ago... hooked up to a folding chair with a 6 volt lantern battery... it would definitely make you 'rise' quicker...}>
john:-X06 |
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I've had this one sitting in my garage for years as a conversation piece. It does not have a Foprd Script on it.
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Originally Posted by NumberDummy
(Post 10702031)
Is that a coil, or a magneto? Since Model T's did not have batteries...it's a magneto.
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spark coil?
For what it's worth, I found this wiring diagram for a model T on wiki:
Ignition system - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia https://www.ford-trucks.com/user_gal...id=244312&.jpg They call it a 'spark coil' in the article. |
Bet you can't get that at autozone....
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They're definitely coils. The T's did all have a magneto for generating the DC power to run them, but while Ford called it a magneto, it's more like a primitive generator. Basically just a ring of magnets on the flywheel with matching set of stationary wound coils. No resemblance in appearance or function to an ignition impulse magneto. The later T's had both the magneto and an engine-mounted generator, electric starter, and a 6-volt battery. You could start and run it on the battery electrical system or if your battery was dead, you could flip a switch and start and run it with the hand crank and magneto power.
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Someone had put a coat of varnish on mine and it looks great...
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