yeah.. I took it off and to work where I hooked up 2 ohm meters and wiggled it all over, bending it in a bunch of places and stuff... stayed the same on both wires the whole time
The wires can be OK with no real voltage or heat in them!..often "bad" wires dont show up until they have had current passing thru them for awhile..
I've seen a Dodge Dakota run perfectly ,then shut off as if the ignition was turned off--it'd still crank over,but had no spark..
A friend pulled his hair out trying to figure out the problem--he has friends at junkyards who'd give him parts to "test" and see if it made any difference,to no avail..tried another coil,distributor,and several sensors,even the ECM,nothing changed..it would run great for 2-5 minutes,then shut off--almost like it had a timer in the ignition circuit..
Finally,one morning he decided to hook up a light bulb to the 12V power wire to the ignition coil...it started and ran,and as soon as it decided to stall,the bulb went out too...no power getting to the coil!..
He unwrapped the wiring harness ,and found a spot where it passes behind the water pump,he discovered if he wiggled the wires when the truck did run,it would sputter and stall out!---the harness showed no sign of damage either...the coil power wire had a spot in it that felt "empty" when he ran his fingernails along the wire--it was also hot there too!...he shaved the insualtion off,and only a few strands of wire were there,the spot also had white corrosion powder there--the strands of wire looked black like carbon too..evidently they would pass enough current to get it started,but after a few minutes,the strands heated up,,and broke the connection..almost like a circut breaker...
He snipped the wire back about 6" from that spot,and spliced a new hunk in to the ignition coil...that fixed it,it has been running great for several months now...the owner estimates he'd have spent 300+ bucks on the parts alone he "borrowed" from the junkyard..and two other garages sent him away no better off,after charging him almost 200 bucks to "diagnose" it..
I have seen a similar Dakota that refused to start on a cold morning--if you left the truck sitting until noon or so in the sun,it would then fire up and run great,till the next cold start,it wouldn't start if it was below 35 degrees or so..
My friend did the usual tests,then decided it must be the ECM,which is mounted on the inner fender on those trucks--he's seen the printed circut boards corrode and cause problems like that before..
The next cold morning at his shop,he used his heat gun to warm up the ECM after it refused to start,and it fired right off...
--the owner didn't have the cash to buy a rebuilt one,and no junkyards had the right ECM in stock,so he left a 100 watt droplight against the ECM overnight!--it worked to get it started in the mornings,but if the weather stayed cold and cloudy while he was working,he had to walk or beg for a ride home...he found a used ECM at a junkyard and that seems to have cured it..