thanks guys. This is the bulletin I was going off of:
Yes, that bulletin was pertinent given the oem technology at that point in time. But in the past 35 years much has changed in the engine component and aftermarket world!
Secondary cabling at the point in time when that bulletin (and the assembly line process) was pertinent involved the use of a graphite/carbon matrix (along with either cotton, rayon, or nylon fiber support) for the conductor. That material has an approximate resistance of 2,000+ ohms per foot of length. That was used in order to attentuate rfi (exhibited as crackle or static on the am radios in use at that time) per federal requirements. And that cabling promotes inductive crossfire when an engine has a firing order where two cylinders are adjacent in the firing order and the affected plug cables are run parallel to each other (even when separated by some distance). The simple fix for that condition, simply cross the two cables over each other at some angle less than 180*. That effectively attentuates any possible inductive crossfire.
Instead, ihc chose to route the offending cables well away from each other, and yes, that works also.
Typical carbon/graphite plug cabling has a lifespan of around 10k miles if handled gently and not allowed to run close to an exhaust manifold/heat source. Then the cables were replaced during "major tune-up" which also involved full ignition reconditioning and a carburetor overhaul.
In the 80's, "spiral-wound" or "helical-wound" cabling was introduced in the aftermarket as a "performance upgrade". But in reality it was done because of the vastly increased underhood temps associated with 2nd gen emissions engines. Also...because of the 50k mile federal emissions warranty forced in by the feds, a spark plug cable made of the older material would not last, thereby creating a mis-fire that was exhibited in a failed emissions test. So unless the oem wanted to reimburse for continuous warranty claims under the emissions warranty, the technology had to change...same as the fact that breaker points would not meet the warranty criteria but electronic switches would (usually).
Helical-wound plug cables (both oem and aftermarket) have been the norm for many years, though the performance/aftermarket still pimps the stuff as some high-end innovation. That is pure marketing bs.
The best effect that helical-wound secondary cable has had is...reduction in secondary cable resistance down to the 300ohms per foot range and much better attentuation of rfi with the plethora of electronic devices in use on today's vehicles. The durability of this type cabling is far superior to any old skool secondary cabling, which does still have an application amongst vehicle restoration purists. The secondary effect has been the greatly reduced emf/rfi as some form of plastic has replaced many body panels (the hood) on vehicles which has no shielding benefit in attenuating emf/rfi. This is what allows the use of an ipod jacked into a high end head unit along with a gps-based nav system. Back in my day, we were only concerned with how to reduce the static on our tube-powered johnson cb radios with crystal tuners.
And...the actual technical operation of any modern oem or aftermarket electronic ignition system is based upon the use of matching secondary cabling. Most especially when using an add-on/aftermarket capacitive discharge "box" on these older vehicles.
Up through the 70's, chev fought this issue on the corvette by placing the secondary cables inside of a metallic shield since the plastic hoods/fenders/bodies did nothing for attenuating rfi.