My car has a “speed switch”. It is part of the exhaust emission control used on 1968 and the early ’69 models. (p. 00-74) It switches off the fuel supply by actuating a solenoid installed on the fuel injection pump when the car is going downhill and your foot is off the gas pedal. A number of conditions must apply for the fuel to be switched off: The engine speed has to be over about 1100 RPM, the gear selector (on the automatic) has to be in 2, 3 or 4, and your foot has to be off the pedal, which closes a micro switch on the firewall. To test for operation of the fuel cut-off solenoid, one connects a test light between the solenoid terminal and ground. I suspected a malfunction and installed such a test lamp taped to the wipers, so that I can observe operation while driving. My speed switch operates intermittently: When it works, the car runs a little better after a long downhill run, or after deceleration on the freeway because fuel does not accumulate as much as when the solenoid does not work. I have traced the fault to the speed switch and have taken it apart: There is a relay controlled by a circuit board. The circuit board gets a signal from the minus terminal of the ignition coil: A pulsating voltage, the frequency depending on RPM or firing impulses. There is simply a throttle coil, which permits a voltage to pass when the frequency is high enough. The circuit board appears to be an amplifier that provides enough voltage to the relay coil to close the relay. But I may have that all wrong. At any rate, my switch operates some time, and some time not. I have cleaned the contacts of the relay and adjusted the stops on the relay. Help please!