Last week I told you about how, after my adventures in static timing, I had no
spark.I'm pleased to say that the car is now running, but it goes to show you
that you can still get something fundamentally wrong after working on the same
car, with the same techniques after forty years.
While trying out Mike Salter's method for checking the static timing, I thought
I'd re-wire the cap and move the distributor around so that it would be
oriented the way I see most BJ8's set up- with the vacuum advance between the
oil filter and the block. When I put everything back together, it wouldn't
start and I seemed to have no spark.This is where I began to make
mistakes...Rich Chrysler used to say to me "don't over think these things,
Steve!"
Guess I'm still over thinking. I made myself an acetate template of the
distributor cap points so that I could see exactly which point the rotor was
approaching, because I knew by now that I had a timing problem. This was my
second mistake. The point that was about to fire was not the one I thought was
about to fire, so I spent some wasted time getting it out by one point...with
the width of the rotor point, it was a little confusing.Anyway, I'm back to my
old configuration, firing on all six, and feeling slightly stupid.
I could have kept this all to myself, but who knows, it may help some other
befuddled home mechanic who gets too close to the problem.
Thanks for all your suggestions
Stephen, BJ8
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