I've blown 2 coil packs within an hour on an '83 GMC Suburban 350 engine. What...

Christopher

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...might the problem be? I recently had a cam replaced on my truck. Driving it home from the shop, the engine just stopped. We eliminated fuel issues, arrived at a blown coil pack, and replaced it. It turned over, ran for about three seconds, and stopped again. What could possibly be causing the issue?
 
Are you sure the coil is bad? Did you test it? I suspect your problem might be a bad coil resistor or arc seal gasket under the coil. More often than not, rather than a bad coil, a bad coil resistor or arc seal gasket will be the source of the no-spark condition on the GM HEI coil-in-cap distributors. It is inexpensive, easy to replace, and looks like this:
http://info.rockauto.com/getimage/getimage.php?imagekey=938744&imageurl=http%3A//info.rockauto.com/Airtex/6R1000.jpg

But a no-spark condition on the GM HEI distributors is by far most often caused by a bad magnetic ignition pickup in the distributor.

Here is a link that will help you test the coil (scroll down to distributor components testing):
http://www.angelfire.com/realm2/84camaro/fix_the_car/coil/coil2.htm
 
A short to power in the charge circuit of a coil pack can over-heat it in less than 20 seconds. Who's been messing with your wireing harness????
 


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