I've never heard of this happening before. Could be the block was damaged
already at that point, the spindle was a mismatch with this particular block
and
was tight so seized, could be the distributor was binding somehow, stopped
and the spindle stopped till the cam spat it out?
Do you have a picture of what the spindle looked like after? Did the spindle
turn freely in the block when it was assembled?
The block was a 1275?
Regards
Daniel
In a message dated 26/08/07 23:33:28 GMT Daylight Time, kidjoevid@yahoo.com
writes:
> wrote a month ago regarding my incredibly bad karma
> and mechanical abilities when my brand new rebuilt
> 1275 broke the boss in the block for the dizzy
> spindle. If anyone has any insight as to what went
> wrong, please let me know what you think. See a pic at
> the link below. I finally got a new block and it goes
> to the machine shop tomorrow. Surely there isn't
> anything one could do assembling the short block that
> would cause this, would there? The freakin' thing ran
> smooth for 60 sec.
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/40542646@N00/1243788992/
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/40542646@N00/1242964161/
>
> Joe Lansing
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