Terry, I did the upgrade with the E92 coil about a two months ago in my 89 4.2 and its been running great until today. The Jeep died on me while I was on my way back from work. A co-worker and I pulled it back home and I took the multimeter to it. Zero Volts at the pigtail wires with the key off, then 11ish volts with the key on and cranking. I also put my timing light on the wire from the coil to the distro and got no flashes.
Gotta be a bad coil already right?
I put the old coil back on there with the new cap, rotor, wires and plugs gapped at 45 and that didn't work either. Should the old coil have made those plugs fire, or was the gap to much for it to overcome?
Also, is 11ish volts enough to run the coil?
You SHOULD get a reduced voltage at the ignition coil CONNECTOR (Disconnected from the coil) when the key switch is in the 'Run' position,
And full battery voltage when 'Cranking' the engine.
(Keep in mind that battery voltage will REDUCE as the starter engages and cranks the engine.
If you show 12.6 volts when at rest, then crank the voltage will drop to around 10 or 11 volts, and come back up when you stop cranking,
But it's better than the 4-6 volts the coil gets when the key switch is in the 'Run' position and the resistor is taking a huge bite out of the voltage/current to the coil!)
The starter relay bypasses the resistor to supply more current to the ignition coil during starting so you get faster, cleaner starts,
Then when you let the key switch drop back to 'Run',
The ignition resistor comes back into play to keep the module alive during 'Normal' operations.
When you connect to battery 'Positive' with a test light,
And probe the 'Green' wire terminal on the coil connector,
(Unhooked from ignition coil) you should get a flashing light when cranking the engine.
This means the module is triggering the coil to 'Fire' each cylinder.
Most of the time when you have the ignition switch in the 'Run' position, you will get a steady 'Bright' light when the engine isn't cranking.
This is a quirk of the Jeep/Motorcraft module, and it's why your module will melt down if you leave the key in the 'Run' position for very long without the engine running.
Constant current through coil/module will overheat the switching transistor and the module will fail to function.
This is also a good way to see if your module is getting a good 'Ground' from the distributor housing.
(Coil/Module grounds through the distributor housing)
If you get a 'Dim' light, then the module isn't getting a good ground from the distributor housing, and you would be better off supplying a dedicated ground to the module 'Black' wire that relying on the distributor housing for 'Ground'.
-------------------------------------
With test light connected to 'Ground' or battery negative,
If you get Reduced voltage to the coil terminal in the 'Run' position, that is normal. (Dim Light)
If you get battery voltage to the coil terminal in the 'Crank' or 'Start' position, that is normal. (Brighter light)
That means the 'Issue' isn't the fusible link that feeds the fuse block, the ignition fuse, or wiring to the ignition coil...
--------------------
With test light connected to POSITIVE source,
If you get a 'Steady Bright' light with key switch in the 'Run' position, that is normal.
If you get a 'Flashing Bright' light with the key switch in the cranking position (engine cranking over), that is normal.
If you DO NOT get a steady bright light, that means the ignition module is cooked, or not getting a good 'Ground',
And not having a good ground will cook the ignition module over time.
If you DO NOT get a flashing light with the engine cranking, that means the module isn't switching the coil On/Off to fire it.
That could be anything from power to the module not getting through on the 'Cranking' circuit,
Ground is faulty,
Trigger signal not getting through to the module,
Trigger in distributor has quit working...
Or the wiring between trigger & module is toast.
This would be a good time to disconnect the two wire 'Power' connector from the module and test the harness side.
Harness 'Blue' wire should be 'Hot' when cranking.
Harness 'Red' wire should be 'Hot' when in 'Run' position.
---------------------------------
With just a test light you can locate which side of the fire wall the 'Issue' is, and if it's a module/trigger or power supply issue to the module/coil.
-----------------------------------
One other thing,
The E-core coil is VERY hard on the factory module.
Very common for the factory modules to burn up after switching to E-core coils with I-6 engines!
A MUCH better choice for the I-6 engine with factory DuraSpark module would be the MSD Blaster 2F coil,
p/n 8205.
It is a DIRECT replacment for your factory coil and will keep the module alive, and produces much more spark energy than the factory Jeep/Motorcraft distributor.
The p/n 8205 has the Ford type terminals on top, so you don't even have to change coil connectors, just pop the factory connector right on the MSD 2F coil and go.
An E-core coil is a worth while switch, even if you have to switch ignition modules to run in *IF YOU HAVE A V-8 ENGINE*...
The I-6 engine simply doesn't turn enough RPM or have enough cylinders to require a fast saturating coil like an E-core coil,
And fast saturation on slow firing engine means you are sending too much current to the module, and it overheats...
Stick with the Blaster 2F coil if you have an I-6 engine and things will be MUCH nicer for you in the long run!