You could try another resistor, but what you describe is a classic coil failure.
There will be a small break inside it somewhere, that when cold/cool and will complete the circuits needed to make the field. As it warms up, this slight break will separate, break the circuit, and - - no fire, just as John T describes. Let it cool down and it will run for another short while.
For a replacement coil, there are two ways to go. The presence of a resistor leads me to assume the tractor is running on 12 volts. The thing to keep in mind (technically it's a little off, but the concept is right) is that the distributor wants only the output it would get from a 6v coil, whether the tractor is 6v or 12v.
So there are are two kinds of 12v coil. Your parts guy should know which is which.
1) Is the type that is probably there now. It is actually just a 6v coil, and requires the resistor in the line powereing it to drop the voltage to 6v.
2) Is designed to take a full 12v in (i.e., no need for the resistor). It doesn't have a resistor internally, but is wound differently, so that the effect is the same.
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Today's Featured Article - The 8N and the Fox - by Zane Sherman. Dec. 13 1998, Renfroe, Alabama. Last niht I dreamed about the day that I plowed the field of about 10 acres over on what Jimmy and Dandy called the Ledbetter field. I was driving the 1948 8N Ford tractor that Jimmy bought in 48 new This was prebably in about 1951 and maybe even befor the house was built. This would have made me to be about16 years old and I drove the tractor for nothing and would have paid to drive it if I had had any money which I didn't, but neit
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