mk e wrote:
As far as coils and amps, they draw WAY less at first and the draw grows which is why it's so important to set the dwell right....you'll fire the coil if you don't

So you aren't using 120 amps, more like 20 to maybe 30. at max rpm and much lest at low rpm. It'll be fiiiiiine.....

coils will draw the most wherever the dwell time is longest, either bench testing or the data points provided by the mfg can give you the relevant amp draw to dwell time. From what I've seen on the vids from the bench testing the D585 a 4~5millisecond dwell ranges from 10~12amps, So if it idle your running 4~5ms then the amp draw on the system will be 120~144 amps. That honestly seems like too much dwell but it really comes down the pressures and spark energy needed to run the engine best. You'll probably be in the 6.5~7.5 Amp spot so that's only 78~90Amps at idle dropping from there.
Went back thru some notes, twin post waste spark coils are actually two 6V coils in series. Also make sure that your B+ wiring loom to the coil is less resistance then the primary coil.
Now the fun starts with all the EE work right...
For those reading at this point and may not know...
The lower the primary coil resistance the faster the B field can build and the less dwell needed, however that lower resistance means higher current draw. Dwell is the period of time the circuit is closed and the electric charge is moving into the coil. Once open the field collapses and that back EMF induces an electric charge in the secondary coil. Ignition coils with high primary resistance will draw less current when charging and take longer to do so, that limits the amount of secondary energy made. Some coils utilize an internal resistance on the primary side as means of current limiting, some do not. The coils that do not have a primary internal resistance need to be matched with a high resistance wires and plugs. Ignition systems require being impedance matched, otherwise things 'fry' or short. External resistance is nice when fine tuning and designing the system for maximum efficiency in a custom setup, but requires a fair amount of more math and worksheeting to figure out. Internal resistive coils take out all that but also cut a compromise.