Dan's write-up explains it well.
HEI works very well, with no real vices in this application.
Getting rid of the ballast resistor is a minor advantage, but it doesn't hurt. It does mean one less spare to carry. You DO carry a spare, don't you?
For me, the choice was made by availability. I found the HEI parts cheap, and found them first.
I had already picked up an electronic distributor and connectors from a car that was missing the ECU. If it had had a complete Mopar system, that's what I'd have today.
A breakroom conversation on the subject netted me the four-pin HEI module from a Corvette (As far as I know, it's the same as any other HEI from the same era.) I grabbed a spare module and some screws from a junkyard Caddy. The Caddy module was used for the first setup, and lasted 30 seconds before roasting itself. The "Corvette" module has been running over a year.
The only thing I had to buy was the skinny female spade terminal.
I am running a leftover Accel Supercoil, Autolite 985's, and nothing else special.
_________________ "When you find a big kettle of crazy, it's best not to stir it." - Pointy-haired Boss
1964 Valiant V200, 225/Pushbutton 904
BBD, CAI, HEI, LBP, AC, AM/FM/USB, EIEIO
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