<font color="green">Eureka wire is a high resistance wire and can be used in place of discrete resistors.
In the case of the TR7 it is used to drop the 12V of the system to 6V at the coil. The wire is on the low tension side of the ignition system between the ignition switch and the coil. For whatever reason Triumph (and probabaly many other car manufacturers) decided to use a section of Eureka wire in the loom rather than a discrete component which of course makes it much harder to do anything about if it fails.
I have never quite understood the real purpose of using a 6V coil and having to drop the voltage rather than using a 12V coil in the first place although I assume there must be some advantage. I beleive that the systems are set up in such a way that the resistance is bypassed during start up so that at this time only the coils actually receives the full 12V which is supposed to make starting easier (bigger, fatter sparks).
But then if it works at start up why not go for 12V all the time? </font id="green">
<font color="green">Gordon
GRD 1980 Brooklands Green 2l FHC
OVC 1980 Platinum Silver 3.9l V8 FHC
Bedford, UK.
http://www.waringstowntr7s.co.uk/blogs/ ... gordonkerr</font id="green">