Would love to hear this. If he has spark AND fuel there isn't anything in the dizzy that could be bad.
I assume we are still dealing with electronics here. If it were points, I don't see a way to have both.
But, with that module involved, the sky is the limit.
I don't have a schematic or even a operating flowchart. But it has to work something like this:
The pickup coil generates a signal when the reluctor passes it. Couple of ways it could do that, and a couple of types of signal that it could output.
Doesn't matter.
The ignition module receives that signal. At this point, a defective coil could send in a noisy signal, or noise could get onto the line.
Assuming that that is OK, then the module has to amplify the signal, possibly modify it, and send it out.
At this point you have active components involved. Transistors, maybe Schotty diodes, triacs, darlington amplifiers, etc.
Any of these can go into oscillation and start generating a signal at the wrong time, or even when no trigger exists.
You could have one trigger when the dist. is supposed to fire, and get a dozen out. Or they could be delayed.
That module probably is supposed to fire on either the leading or trailing edge of the more or less square wave pulse from the pickup coil.
If the signal is weak, then it might fall into the "don't care" region of the module. A signal at that level is not guaranteed to either fire or not fire. And might do either one.
Just something as simple as a broken wire in the pickup coil, could make and break a couple of times per pulse, and send multiple pulses to the module.
Any of the possibilities would supply pulses to the controller telling it to pulse the fuel injectors plus to the coil to fire it.
But they would be either at the wrong time, or have pulses in between the good ones.
Is that what is happening? No idea. But, he put on a new dist. and the engine quit working shortly thereafter.
I would suspect a mechanical failure before the electronic one, but either one is possible.
I saw one of the old Ford Duraspark modules go nuts one time. It went into some kind of internal oscillation. If you just turned on the key, it would get hot, and whichever plug wire the rotor was pointing at would continuously fire without the engine turning over.
Never underestimate the weirdness of electronics........