could be - hard to tell, lower shift cables also tend to stall motors - loose wire to ignition, faulty neutral safety switch in control box -
issue is it only happens every 25 mins - thats alot of driving to replicate the issue.
on an old school points setup you want this:
batt -> ignition switch -> into ballast resistor -> out from ballast resistor (drops from 12+v to about 9-10v when running) -> coil positive (this RUNS at 9-10v, STARTS at 12.6v. Connect the wore form slave solenoid "i" terminal straight to this one - it boost ignition to a full 12.6v when cranking)
A slave solenoid has an "i" terminal that bypasses the above ballast resistor.
Make SURE you are not running without the resistor - you will fry your points very quickly. I have an old suntune kit that tests points - u can find the kits all over ebay for 25, usually with timing light, comp tester and vac too!!
now the shift interrupt switch momentarily cuts your motor while going into gear and out, u hardly notice it its so quick, if the switch pin is gummed up and staying closed this will cut the motor.
If your lower cable is hard to move the interrupt switch will "think" like you are shifting gears because the cable tension is high and cut the motor when in fact its hanging due to the cable not moving freely.
You can remove the cable by the engine bracket, clamp a clear hose over the opening, fill it with ATF and apply air pressure and force the atf thru cable, shd free it up alot. takes some time but made a world of difference to mine -
the coild should never get hot when running - if its hot its cooked, get a new one. even after running HARD for a long time it whd be warm only..
SOOO - your coil might be shot, you might be running without the ballast and/or correct wiring (full 12+v to coil is bad!), if so - your "new" points might be fried.
Your new condenser might be junk - its VERY common, in fact a condenser thats been working great shd be thrown in the spares box with an OK mark!
a failing condenser/pints will stall randomly.. same for a bad coil - as it heats up especially.