I forgot to explain something that makes all of this possible. This distributor only has 3 lobes on the cam. When I run it on my tester each set of points fires on three positions of the protractor.
AHA! THAT makes a lot more sense now. Without that tidbit, the unanointed like me, would have assumed a 6-lobe cam. Thanks for clarifying.
Lurtch, a failure is a failure, and there are a lot of people out there who have had
points fall apart in less than 5,000 miles; that doesn't make them "junk". Sometimes electronics fail right out of the box, sometimes they last forever. At $89 for the Pertronix set up, a complete spare kit in the trunk of your car is wise insurance; and costs less than a tow, or probably your mechanic's bill for removing it and installing points. Had you had a spare set, you could have replaced it in less time than the delay in limping to your mechanic on 3 cylinders! My Crane lasted 5 years, and only the mechanic's failure to install it properly caused an issue. I would not call it junk.
You can tell your mechanic that with this "junk" my car has been running dandy for 5 years. Granted I don't put a lot of miles on the car--probably about 5-6K in that time. I would hazard a guess that there is more good luck with Pertronix than bad. Our friend theengineer, as I recall, tried Pertronix and couldn't get a smooth idle. Some have lamented here on this site, about the downgrade in quality of Bosch points as they went offshore. There are some who have not had the greatest luck with the 123 system. You experiment, and do what works for you, and what you feel comfortable with. Lurtch, aside from the failure, how did your car run with the Pertronix? Better, worse, or the same as the points it replaced? I keep a spare set of everything I can particularly on road trips--even points! Electronics fail mostly from heat, and we have a hot car.
Today, thanks to Naj's reminder, I will pull the dis cap off and check those lube points!
For our UK friends:
http://www.h-h-ignitionsolutions.co.uk