Hi.
I'm trying to figure out a good ground path
for my coils
For "ground to head" I would use the stud
where you bolt down the OEM spark plug harness.
2 banks, so 3 on the left and 3 on the right...
Thoughts?
Also for the "ground back to battery" I'm thinking ground them
individually to a intake manifold stud? Know what I mean?
All opinions and ideas are very welcomed.
Any ideas for good grounds?
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- Posts: 6859
- Joined: Oct 10, 2008 1:48 PM
- Location: Back U.P. North,. Where the water's blue, the wind is free and seasons four.
I think I would run a dedicated common ground just for the coil pack grounds. You could terminate the common ground onto a hard chassis ground or even run it back to the battery common. A nice small strand #12 or #10 (overkill) would work nicely.
Grounding to the engine, while commonly done is often a source of problems due to engine/chassis ground problems. Of course if your using solid engine mounts with no rubber it would be fine.
Grounding to the engine, while commonly done is often a source of problems due to engine/chassis ground problems. Of course if your using solid engine mounts with no rubber it would be fine.
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- Posts: 6859
- Joined: Oct 10, 2008 1:48 PM
- Location: Back U.P. North,. Where the water's blue, the wind is free and seasons four.
No. Run a wire from the under hood battery ground bolt then route it close to the coils, then connect each coil ground to that wire. You could even shield if so inclined but I'm not sure a ground would be worth shielding.
Your schematic says Pin C must ground to the head the spark plugs sits in, so just terminate the other end of the ground to the head.
Your schematic says Pin C must ground to the head the spark plugs sits in, so just terminate the other end of the ground to the head.
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- Posts: 6859
- Joined: Oct 10, 2008 1:48 PM
- Location: Back U.P. North,. Where the water's blue, the wind is free and seasons four.
My battery is also in the trunk, but there is still that big bolt on the left fender below the fuse box that was used for the battery ground. Failing that, you could use the ground point right behind the head, the one the block uses as a ground. Run those grounds to it in parallel.
I'm sure you could put the head ground under a intake manifold bolt or something like that, to the same effect.
I'm sure you could put the head ground under a intake manifold bolt or something like that, to the same effect.