I'm still having stalls, so I'm looking into a ballast resister. I did locate and check the resistance wire and it was fine,no burn marks or broken connections. I did notice the writing on the line saying do not cut. Do i need to remove the resistance line and replace it with a ballast resistor? How should I install a ballast resistor? thanks for the help.
If you have that wire, you shouldn't need a ballast resistor!
I can't remember exactly, but there should be a lowered voltage (8 to 11 volts IIRC) at one of the coil terminals.( may be the (+) side) The answer can be found at jeepsunlimited.com
You'll need to register to do a proper board search there. The answer will come from one of three members. John Strenk, mbalbritton, or JunkYardGenius.
Do a board search for resistor wire. The page with all the threads will come up, & you want ones that are designated from the CJ forum.
The thing is, the CJ needs the wire from Napa as it wasn't in the CJ harness. Once I went through many E-conversations I was able to understand the schematic I posted in this thread. I highlighted the wire with yellow & mbalbritton agreed it was the one. That wire appears in the chilton's drawings for all 4.2L 87-90 YJ's
The reason it's needed is the ignition module will fry with a higher output coil, such as the E-core coil from junkyard escorts. (I run one of these, & it works great $5.00)
Also your problem could just be a bad module. If you can find an original "Ford Dura-spark" box at the junkyard, it's gonna be way more reliable than any box you can buy new. Especially a new one from a big box parts house like autozone.
Re-check all your Nutter connections too, make doubly sure they are tight.
EDIT; look through these links;
Junk Yard Genius.com 'Stealth HEI Page
Ballast REsistor and TFI coil...
Frying ignition modules - Page 2 - JeepForum.com
I think that one of these shows how to use an HEI ignition module inside a gutted duraspark box. Not saying it's the way to go, but it is an option & can be used as a backup.