You guys are not going to believe what the problem turned out to be. Thanks for all the excellent suggestions, as they helped me track this problem down.
First of all, I got a replacement distributor from O-reilly, very nice looking, for $54 including tax. I popped that puppy in, expecting my problem to go away, and it still double fired.
So I thought, well, it must be either the engine or the wiring. I then hooked up the distributor to a drill and looked at the waveforms as suggested. It was a very nice waveform with no double pulses.
I made a nice little test harness out of two of those 4 pin trailer wiring harness jacks, so that I could plug in between the distributor and the wiring harness and look at the signals with the scope. I then looked at the distributor pickup signal, and this time there was no double firing. So I added the scope probe back to the minus side of the coil, and sure enough, no double firing. Somehow adding the test harness fixed the problem!
Possibilities that went through my head: Inductive pickup where my wires were picking up spark, extra capacitance of the scope probe, extra inductance of the 1 ft test harness. I move the harness around, thinking that if it were inductive pickup, then it should be easy to make it happen. Moving the wires did not make it double fire. Finally it hit me: I had wired the test harness such that it swapped the two pickup wires, changing the polarity of the pickup signal. What luck!
I then yanked out the handy dandy Moparts electronic distributor wiring, and looked closer at my harness. The harness I have has a brown wire and a black wire going from the 2 prong plug to the Orange ECU unit. The harness is wired exactly backwards from what the moparts diagram says it should be! The brown and black wires are not swapped, so I think it was wired this way from wherever the harness came from, which is no telling where.
I yanked the harness out of the car and peeled back the tape next to the two prong plug and swapped the wires, heatshrinking and soldering the connections. I then put the harness back in the car, and no double fire!
I then hooked up one of my tachs with a reproduction board in it, and the tach worked perfectly, reading the proper RPM everywhere.
Whew, what a relief!
Here is the URL of the wiring harness so you can check your harness and see if it is backwards. This diagram is definately correct, it shows the correct polarity.
http://www.moparts.com/Tech/Archive/elec/3.html
Here is my Half Baked Theory on what is going on:
The Orange box is probably supposed to fire on the rising edge as the reluctor approaches the pickup coil. Since I had my polarity backwards on the pickup coil, it was firing as the reluctor left the pickup coil. As the ignition coil fired, it generated a 260V positive spike on the minus pickup of the coil. This spike is inductively coupled to the two pickup wires, and since the reluctor is not near the pickup coil anymore to create a voltage source, it causes the Orange box to fire again. This may not be exactly what is going on, but it is something like this.
Does Don/FBO have a link on the web to the aftermarket ECU units you guys were mentioning above?
GregGarner
www.rt-eng.com
Greg@rt-eng.com