Re: 1963 Ballast Resistor Configuration
If you took the ballast off a '65-67 Chevy product in the scrap yard, then it's most likely that you wound up with a service spare part. If I recollect properly, Corvette was one of the last in Chevy's line to abandon the discrete ballast resistor and make the transition to the ballast resistor function being built into the wiring harness...
Further, the transition away from a discrete ballast resistor started WAY back in 1958-59...
Next, you'll find ballasts that are similar to what we see used on Corvette but with subtle differences. Like: the 'bump' along the outside back edge of the mounting tab and/or a flared collar surrounding the back side of the bolt hole in the tab. These differences stem from different mounting techniques used by other GM car lines.
The 'bump' was a protective measure to thwart the ballast from 'spinning' on its mounting bolt relative to an intended position. Such movement, depending on where the ballast was physically mounted might let the attaching wires physically touch an adjacent metal surface and short out the ignition...
The same is true of the version of the ballast that has a 'collar' protruding from the back side of the mounting hole. The collar mated with a recess in the target vehicle's mounting hole and kept the ballast shifting up/down or side to side.
Chevy was one of the few car lines that mounted the ballast on the underhood body panel. Others typically attached the ballast to nearby engine components (e.g. coil mounting bracket)...
If you took the ballast off a '65-67 Chevy product in the scrap yard, then it's most likely that you wound up with a service spare part. If I recollect properly, Corvette was one of the last in Chevy's line to abandon the discrete ballast resistor and make the transition to the ballast resistor function being built into the wiring harness...
Further, the transition away from a discrete ballast resistor started WAY back in 1958-59...
Next, you'll find ballasts that are similar to what we see used on Corvette but with subtle differences. Like: the 'bump' along the outside back edge of the mounting tab and/or a flared collar surrounding the back side of the bolt hole in the tab. These differences stem from different mounting techniques used by other GM car lines.
The 'bump' was a protective measure to thwart the ballast from 'spinning' on its mounting bolt relative to an intended position. Such movement, depending on where the ballast was physically mounted might let the attaching wires physically touch an adjacent metal surface and short out the ignition...
The same is true of the version of the ballast that has a 'collar' protruding from the back side of the mounting hole. The collar mated with a recess in the target vehicle's mounting hole and kept the ballast shifting up/down or side to side.
Chevy was one of the few car lines that mounted the ballast on the underhood body panel. Others typically attached the ballast to nearby engine components (e.g. coil mounting bracket)...
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