My 12 cents worth:
I go along with Chuck, only maybe a little more so. Original is good; modifications are ok as long as they are tried and proven; experimentation is fun, but things get fried once in a while. I have a lot to learn about ignition systems, but I've always understood that the correct ballast resistor is necessary to help keep the coil alive. The coils we typically use are designed for lower voltage rather than the 12-13.5 volts from the battery. Higher voltage makes them run hotter and shortens their life. They do give a hotter spark when they get 12 volts, though, so starting may be easier. Many cars, including maybe the later 113s (?), bypass the ballast during cranking to get a hotter spark for starting, but as soon as the key is released, the ballast is no longer bypassed. Best of both worlds there, hot spark to start, but long coil life.
There are coils that are designed to run without an external ballast resistor. These coils either have an internal resistor, or are designed for the full 12 volts (not sure about the latter, maybe they all have internal resistors ?).
Last, and I know many will disagree with this (especially companies that market high perf ignition systems!), but there is little or no power to be gained from a hotter ignition system, IF the stock system is working well. In 30+ year old cars, it's quite conceivable that many of these ignitions are no longer doing the best job, so replacement may make a big difference. If you put in a hot coil and the car really perks up, there was probably something wrong with the old system. Which is not to say a hot coil is a bad thing - I use a red coil, too; but it made no difference in how the car ran.
George Davis
'69 280 SL Euro manual