Hello Ann,
I have the Crane ignition on my car. It has been on the car for about 10 years and functions well. In fact, the car starts faster than original.
I instinctively don't believe in this kind of coincidence. The first thing to check is the wiring diagragm for the Crane--double check it. Pay particular to the grounding of the ignition. Because grounding conductors carry virtually zero voltage, even the slightest corrosion or poor connection will cause a failure of current flow. Grounding is probably responsible for 90 PERCENT of electrical failures. Then check starting(cranking) voltage at the terminal on the switch side of the ballast resistor, the side closest to the firewall( I don't have a pic of this resistor).I have assumed that your battery is properly charged---you shouldn't.
Voltage at this terminal(ballast) should be battery voltage or very close( about 13 volts). If it is less, then you have some resistance in the switch, the switch wiring, or most likely a ground( perhaps the mechanic accidentally moved something). The resistance(failure) could be in the switch but I doubt it. The only way this might have happened would be a short through the switch during the install( I have seen this more than once).
Then check the ballast resistor for resistance. If the ignition capacitor( At the coil) has not been removed you will have to disconnect one side of the resistor or you will get a false reading. My guess is that the resistance is about 3-5 ohms. With the ignition on, you will probably read about six volts on the load side of this resistor because this coil is probably a six volt coil. Twelve volt coils generally have a parallel resistor wire for starting. I have looked at the wiring diagragm and see none.
I should have prefaced all of this by saying that I have never analyzed this problem on this car so these are generic tests---but it should bring the desired result.
If all of these check out OK, then you should check the cap, and the clearance specs, mounting, et cetera, of the sensor in the distributor.I always assume that everything has been installed incorrectly; this is not an insult to your installer, only good technique. We all make simple and obvious mistakes and somehow our brain will not let us revisit the error until all else fails. I think any good tech will agree. How many times have you typed a sentence, proof read it four times, and still did not notice a missing word---this is the same experience.
I hope this helps, John