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I am trying to set the timing in my newly built 383 and having serious headaches.
Info:
When I built the motor I installed an adjustable timing pointer and set the pointer to the TDC mark on the ATI Harmonic balancer after I got the #1 piston TDC using a TDC tool.
When I set my timing gun to 12 degrees and rotate the distributor to get the 12 degrees lined up with the TDC the motor will completely stall or run like crap. Now if I set my 12 degrees on the 20 degree mark on the homonic balancer the motor runs like a raped ape.
I am completely confused, because I just can't see me having the TDC on the pointer 20 degrees off.
Can the cam be degree wrong? I had a builder install the crank and cam and he said that he degreed the cam.
PLEASE some one help me before I start liking the end of a shotgun!
Jake
If you have a dial back timing light you should set it for 36 degrees. Then you and rev the engine up untill the timing stops advancing at maybe 3500 or 4000 RPMs or when ever it stops increasing (vacuum advance disabled). Line up the pointer on the tab with the zero on the balancer using the light and lock down the distributor. Reconnect the vacuum advance and thats it.
I was having similar problems and my son noticed that the **** was loose on the dial back after we used a regular timing light to compare the two on initial timing. We thought the dial back was on zero but it wasn't, which caused timing issues.
Ol Blue.
If your are using an adjustable (dial back) timing light, then your target is the zero mark on the damper. As an example to set base timing to 18 degrees, dial in 18 on the timing light, and then find zero on the damper at the pointer with the light.
If you had the vacuum advance line removed from the dist. can and the line plugged, then you did it properly. 34-36 degrees at around 3000 rpm is in the right ballpark. With a dial-back light set to 36 degrees and the engine revved to 3000 rpm, the timing mark should be at 0 degrees on the damper scale.
Guys I did exaxtly what your refering too. I set my dail on the light to 36 and had someone rev the engine to 3000 and turned my dist. to get the pointer on the 0 mark. And it runs like crap. Vacuum is pluged durimg timing and the light worked fiine last time I timed my buddies truck. I don't think that there is anything wrong with the dist., it is not even a year old Crane electronic dist. that worked flawless last time I used it.
You must disconnect the vacuum timing during the setting!!!!
That is what I mean when I said plugged. I disconected the distributor vacuum line from the carb. and capped the vacuum nipple on the carb. and then set the timming. Is this the correct way???
That IS the correct method. If you've done what you described, you've done it correctly. The only thing to recheck is whether the 0 deg. TDC mark on the damper/timing scale correlates with the #1 piston really being at TDC. That could be where the fault is.....you'd better verify the mark's accuracy with the mechanical position of the engine.
I made a home brew label with Avery stock that has timing marks to 36 degrees that I use to set mine up with. (To cheap to buy a degreed balancer.) I stick the label on the balancer using the stock zero degree mark as a reference,and go from there. I also have an adjustable pointer as you mention,but no dial back timing light,just a cheap Autozone light.
The point I'm trying to make is the measuring tools are not state of the art high tech,but the reference points have to be confirmed,or all else will not make any sense.With this setup,I'm confident my timing is dead on.
Let me know if you need any help,I'm right up the road from you.
I am trying to set the timing in my newly built 383 and having serious headaches.
Info:
When I built the motor I installed an adjustable timing pointer and set the pointer to the TDC mark on the ATI Harmonic balancer after I got the #1 piston TDC using a TDC tool.
Jake
How did you go about finding TDC.
Your problem is most likely just where you set the adjustable pointer.
How did you go about finding TDC.
Your problem is most likely just where you set the adjustable pointer.
I have a piston stop that bolts into the head bolt locations (heads were not on) is how I got TDC. I agree with you I may have messed up installing the pointer. Tonight I am going to verify TDC and adjust the pointer if needed.
Again Thanks Guys!
This forum is great for ideas and problem solving.
Ooo! That has happened before, too. Especially, on a recent C3 purchase. PO shifts the wires so the vacuum can is conveniently located and the new owner hooks onto the wire that is 'normally' #1 [as it appears on the distributor cap]. Yep. That's a "hair-puller".