She started up very reluctantly, hmm, not her typical enthusiasm for a bit of frisky. After finally starting and a warm up, she went off OK and I ventured up and down our rural roadway a couple of times. Maybe 7 km total distance ,which in road gear does not take all that long. She was missing a bit from time to time, so I sped up the rpms in hopes of clearing out any winter carbon accumulation. Soon she was purring a top! I made my way to the entrance to the drive up to the house and shed. 'Stopped to shift into 1st (It's a steep incline) and she just up and died, not to restart, hell or high water. A tow chain was the put to use to get her in the yard ;-( Two days of fighting to get started, then running sweet as candy , then dying, not to restart, had me frosted!
Looking to the fuel, everything checked out. Looking to the mag reminded me of all the nagging issues. The Lucas RF4 was getting long of tooth. She always did have a weak and tempermental spark, even after fitting a replacement bobbin sourced from a wreckers to restore the 6200 ohms of windings from the original item which only measures at about 4100 ohms. Must be some windings shorted out in there.
A host of troubles with the mag really. Weak rotor magnet, iffy windings, and an impulse coupling that kicks out at about 20 rpm. Just when the engine is hitting, the spark goes winky. The condenser even proved out entirely open. Fortunately a spare was in the box of available parts, purchased before hand, just for such a situation.
After "reconditioning" the Lucas too many times, I thought I better fit the WICO XH-23 I had purchased so many years ago for just this reason. (It's a wonder the Lucas mag kept working "just well enough" all these years.)
The WICO mag was selected as a best match to the RF 4, but it's not just a bolt up operation. The pad mounting bolts fit righ up, and the center height is a match. The Wico needed a coupling and some sort of sealing arrangement to keep the engine oil from moving through the timing chest and making it's way out past the magneto. A new coupling for the Hooke drive was turned up and milled out of a block of aluminum. A 5/16 slot one way to fit the Fordson timing gear, and a 1/4 inch slot at 90 degrees to fit the WICO impulse coupling . This piece was about three times thicker than the Fordson original piece to accomodate the WICO's shorter length. I guessed about the length while the stock was in the lathe, but got lucky, as only about .025" was required to be removed to fit the parts just right.
The oil sealing piece was a bit of a thought problem. There really is no surface on the WICO to put any threaded fasteners into. (At least not without more intamate knoledge of what lays inside.)
But a simple flange spigot that gets trapped between the sttep bore in the engine housing and the mag face seems to have been a good choice. A fat o-ring that I had made up as replacement for the felt seal fits the application perfectly.
This sealing piece is a very close fit to the coupling, with clearance maintained by the impulse coupling drive dogs.
About four hours machine time, with most of that consumed by "cut and fit" work methods.
This morning, the spark leads were refit with proper end terminals to plug into the WICO mag distributor cap. Forson spec is to shove them in the cap holes, then clich with a pointed screw. Proper dust and moisture boots went on the leads as well. (All these ignition cable parts compliments of a long past Toyota Land Cruiser

Well, Using the flat belt drive pully to hand over the Engine made finding TDC on #1 a simple matter. (Hand crank had to be removed when the snow plow frame was fitted)
1243! A bit of Choke, a twist of the starter knob, a little clack, clack, clack, of the impulse , and... Varoom!
The old gal has new spark!
We went out for a drive around the neighborhood to mark the event. It's such a delightful spring day.
The RF4 is wrapped in protective wrapper and on the "spares" shelf.


I think I am going to appreciate the water tight construction of the WICO mag. Because I'm quite sure that heavy spring rain we had last week was the reason for this latest bit of bother, With the plow on, the Fordson does not snuggle back into the small shed quite so far as she does stripped down. Still, It was time for a change.
These tractors take some keeping up!
Cheers
Cal
opps, I better go out and snug up those mag mounting bolts, 9/16 head size. I just ran them in finger tight to see if things were fit right. Then fell to my excitement.