Last Autumn my '68 Traveller started to misbehave ; lacking power and gernerally being sluggish although it always started well. I live in the hills of middle Germany at approx the same height as Ben Nevis so in the darker months Morris goes into winter quarters to hibernate. This spring, being as we have all exterienced somewhat warmer than usual I renewed as a matter of course all the spark plugs, points condensor, rotor arm as well as cleaning out the Carb which was full of dirt. For good measure , fitted a spin off oil filter and new oil of course.
Morris then seemed to run quite well apart from a slight hesitancy at about 80 km/hr. But then it started to be difficult to start when warm. A whole new experience becuase you only normally have to touch the key for it to spring into action. I would try to start it a few times, open the bonnet, fiddle a bit and then it might go. I did figure out (thanks to this forum) that the vacuum was the cause of this hesitancy and on fitting a new one (thanks again for the warning about the circlip) went for a test run - I had a new car!!
With a smile of contentment I went to drive it into the garage but there was a broom on the floor so stopped the engine - got out and hung the broom in its proper place. Went to start Morris - nothing!
Two days later after a lot of trial and tribulation, got the motor running from cold for about 3 minutes before it spluttered and stopped. Fiddled with the Carb - (big mistake) fiddled with the Distributer, change the condensor. Nothing worked.
I rang my local workshop - "sounds like the coil" he said.
"It's never the coil" I told him ( my Forum says so)
His workshop is 5km away in the next valley so got my lady to give me a tow to the summit where there is a parking place to look at the b*****y wind turbines and then coasted the remaining 3km downhill. Interesting experience that, you can hear other sounds which with the engine running you normally do not.
Anyway, Bernhard thought the cable from the coil looked dodgy and checked it. He confirmed it was Kaputt
We could not find a temporary replacement so took the lead off Nr 1 cylinder, poked a screwdriver bit into the distributer cap and used this to connect to the coil.
Whroomm - Morris springs into life although running only on 3 but Bernhard showed me that from the end of the lead to the coil and the coil terminal itself, it was arching over. We repaired the original wire and restored Nr 1 lead and again it started up ok.
"this should get you home" he told me (it did not !) "but the coil is about knackered (being German he used another less polite word but knackered will suffice) and the HT leads will need replacing too, to be safe.
I fitted a new coil this morning and life is restored


As soon as they are fixed in and some road tests done - the final report/confirmation will follow then.[frame]