Pertronix Ignitor/Coil Setup |
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Jonny Quest
Grand Poobah Joined: August-20-2013 Location: Utah--via Texas Status: Offline Points: 2979 |
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If everything is set up properly and you are really at 30 degrees BTDC on the ignition timing as "base" then your engine would have serious detonation issues under load. Add 24 degrees of distributor advance at 3,000 RPM and you are looking at 54 degrees total advance. Doesn't pass the smell test...
JQ
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Current
2003 Ski Nautique 206 Limited Previous 2001 Ski Nautique Open Bow 1994 Ski Nautique Open Bow Aqua skiing, ergo sum |
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Hysteria
Groupie Joined: May-31-2020 Location: Indiana Status: Offline Points: 70 |
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I agree, seems impossible. I'm going to try to figure out a way to set it at tdc with some accuracy then see if the harmonic damper is lying to me
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Jonny Quest
Grand Poobah Joined: August-20-2013 Location: Utah--via Texas Status: Offline Points: 2979 |
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Try this: Remove plugs (it makes it easier). Using a large socket and ratchet or breaker-bar, rotate the engine by turning the large nut on the harmonic balancer. Assuming your engine is RR, you will turn counter-clockwise when doing this from the front of the engine. While slowly rotating the engine, place your thumb over the #1 cylinder spark plug hole. On a small-block Ford, that would be the cylinder closest to the driver's seat. While rotating then engine, you will eventually feel air pressure building under your thumb as the piston moves upward on the compression stroke. Once you are sure that you are on the compression stroke (not exhaust stroke), take a long stiff soda straw or new pencil (eraser side down) and slide it into the spark plug hole until it rests on top of the piston. Then, slowly rotate the engine while keeping you soda straw / pencil against the head of the piston. As you rotate the engine, the piston will push the straw / pencil upwards out of the spark plug hole. When the straw / pencil stops moving upwards, you should be at top dead center (TDC). Then you can check your timing marks and indicator on the harmonic balancer and see if everything looks kosher.
JQ
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Current
2003 Ski Nautique 206 Limited Previous 2001 Ski Nautique Open Bow 1994 Ski Nautique Open Bow Aqua skiing, ergo sum |
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KENO
Grand Poobah Joined: June-06-2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 11112 |
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You can skip the straw and come up with the same results.
Since the plug hole is pretty close to horizontal and there's a big hunk of exhaust manifold above it, the straw really just flops around sideways and doesn't tell you that you're at TDC any better than just using your thumb and watching the pointer and timing marks like JQ mentioned There's also an explanation for initial timing of 30 degrees BTDC that passes the "smell test" If that little spring I asked about earlier is too stretched out or broken (you say it's not broken earlier in the thread), then the control of the timing by the weights is pretty much gone. As soon as the engine is started and idling at 700 or so RPM, your timing jumps right up to about 30 degrees BTDC due to no limiting effect from the little spring and with the big spring coming into play at about 3500 or so RPM, you'll end up with about 6 more degrees of timing giving around 36 total. It sounds like somebody may have set the total timing at 36 degrees or so and let idle fall wherever it landed. It can idle great and run good that way. Even starts good because while it's cranking over the flyweights haven't moved too much at all yet. (been there and had run an engine like that for years, now it has a pair of springs that function the way they're supposed to) Easy enough to verify, just check your timing at your idle speed and then rev it up in neutral to 3500 to 4000 rpm and see what the timing reads to see if the little spring is doing what it should be doing.
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Jonny Quest
Grand Poobah Joined: August-20-2013 Location: Utah--via Texas Status: Offline Points: 2979 |
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Geez KENO, my backyard hackery pencil-in-the-plug-hole works great! Last time I used that method was on my 1994…and there was enough space even with the manifold. This is a good test to confirm harmonic balancer timing marks and timing indicator / pointer.
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Current
2003 Ski Nautique 206 Limited Previous 2001 Ski Nautique Open Bow 1994 Ski Nautique Open Bow Aqua skiing, ergo sum |
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KENO
Grand Poobah Joined: June-06-2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 11112 |
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Whatever,
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Hysteria
Groupie Joined: May-31-2020 Location: Indiana Status: Offline Points: 70 |
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I did that test this morning before I took the boat out and ran into the issues that ken described. It seemed right, but I wouldn't trust myself to feel a few degrees of difference so I was hoping to come up with a different way of doing it. I know the mech advance works, but I wasn't paying attention to what rpm it was advancing at so I can check that again when I get it running. The boat ended up dying today and wouldn't even idle. We got nice and wet getting it off the lake, so I need to get this fixed before the wife puts in a sell order.
Also found a rebuild kit for the carb locally after we got back so I'm going to freshen that up as well
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Morfoot
Grand Poobah Joined: February-06-2004 Location: South Lanier Status: Offline Points: 5320 |
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Late to the party on this one guys. FWIW I dropped a Pertronix module in the 88' about 12+ years ago and it's run flawlessly since. I did go with a flamethrower epoxy filled coil as the oil filled coils gave me fits as they didn't like the horizontal install. Paddling the boat with an oar and a slalom ski ain't fun. Have the 1.5 resistor installed along with iridium plugs. Plugs have been in about 10 years. Pulled them last fall and still looked fantastic. No mention yet of how the plugs look or condition of the wires.
I do recall a couple threads here about guys having problems with the pertronix module but most I personally know have not had any problems. Interesting that you were still having issues after swapping back to points. Sounds like you may have to bite the bullet and get a Holley 4160. Be thankful you don't need a 450 cfm carb as they are $200 more than a 650cfm and prices have gone up $200 from a couple years ago. Geez!!!
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"Morfoot; He can ski. He can wakeboard.He can cook chicken.He can create his own self-named beverage, & can also apparently fly. A man of many talents."72 Mustang "Kermit",88 SN Miss Scarlett, 99 SN "Sherman"
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Hysteria
Groupie Joined: May-31-2020 Location: Indiana Status: Offline Points: 70 |
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I put the rebuild kit in my 4160 last night, don't think it was needed though. Carb was clean and the gaskets were still pretty pliable. However, I did find that the transfer slots on the primaries were almost fully exposed, which is probably why my idle mixture screws didn't do anything. The idle speed screw had to be opened that far to get the motor to idle at 700-800 rpm in neutral, so I'm not sure what's causing that yet. I adjusted the secondaries to the bottom of the transfer slots while I had it off as well.
After that, I attempted to reset the timing to around 10deg, but the motor isn't running at this point so it was a little tricky. It will occasionally hit while it cranks, but it's inconsistent and won't idle. Giving it a shot of fuel from the accelerator pump seems to help, but choking it doesn't. Won't start with the throttle fully closed or cracked open either. If I can get it running, I'll check the timing advance. Last time it was running it had a random hard miss at idle when set to 10deg that would smooth out when I advanced to to that 30deg range. I'll also try to do a better job verifying that the timing marks on the pulley correspond to the true TDC soon. Thanks for all the input guys |
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KENO
Grand Poobah Joined: June-06-2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 11112 |
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For your idle issues, you might want to click on the link below and read the whole thing, but make sure you look at the 11th post down which has a link to a Cobra website with good pictures of the air bleeds that are often overlooked along with an easy cleaning method if the carburetor is assembled
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Hysteria
Groupie Joined: May-31-2020 Location: Indiana Status: Offline Points: 70 |
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Thanks, I'll check the air bleeds and make sure they are clear. Never heard of the whole ethanol/zinc thing before, that's interesting. The boat has only seen rec 90 since I've had it, but I imagine the previous owners probably used e10
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Hysteria
Groupie Joined: May-31-2020 Location: Indiana Status: Offline Points: 70 |
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Blew out the bleed passages and then took the metering block off and cleaned it with carb cleaner again after that didn't work. Really seems like a fuel issue right now because if I give it a couple squirts with the accelerator pump it will fire a few times pretty consistently. Otherwise, it randomly hits while cranking but never starts up. Kinda running out of ideas on that front.
Also double checked the mechanical advance, which appears to be normal. Checked the compression just to make sure something didn't go south mechanically and it has 110-120psi (cold of course) on all 8 cylinders. |
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KENO
Grand Poobah Joined: June-06-2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 11112 |
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I think that right about now a quick review of the status of the timing and carburetor might be a good thing.
When the base was at 30 degrees, how far was it advancing? Are you sure there are no vacuum leaks, like at the carburetor spacer gaskets?
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Hysteria
Groupie Joined: May-31-2020 Location: Indiana Status: Offline Points: 70 |
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I don't have an answer for question #1 because I reset the timing to 10deg and never checked the advance when the base was at 30. I did look at the timing when it was at 10deg base and it advanced when it I revved up the motor.
I tried checking for vacuum leaks around the intake with propane and couldn't find any. Carb spacer gaskets all looked good when I pulled the carb off, but were replaced anyway |
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Hysteria
Groupie Joined: May-31-2020 Location: Indiana Status: Offline Points: 70 |
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The low vacuum thing has been bothering me so I checked the timing chain tonight by rotating the crank while watching the distributor rotor. It showed about 15 degrees of crank rotation before the rotor moved, so I went ahead and pulled the timing cover off and confirmed that the timing set is shot. Ordered parts and am hoping to have it back together this weekend. Can't really say this explains the weird ignition timing behavior, but it should be a step in the right direction.
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KENO
Grand Poobah Joined: June-06-2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 11112 |
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I imagine your 76 had the silent chain and an aluminum upper gear with nylon coated teeth along with a 2 pc fuel pump eccentric. That's what was original on a 76.
Were all the teeth intact or maybe lots of chunks missing to make for all the slop? I think it would explain why the timing had to be advanced and it would screw up all your valve opening and closing timing too which would affect vacuum which would make for that lousy running engine .. |
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Hysteria
Groupie Joined: May-31-2020 Location: Indiana Status: Offline Points: 70 |
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Yes, it had the nylon coated cam sprocket, looked like everything was still intact though. The ignition timing references the crank so I wouldn't think the chain slop would require ignition advance. I do think (hope anyway) that the late valve timing was causing the poor vacuum, which is why I started investigating it in the first place. If I can get it to run and idle after this is fixed I'll take another look at the ignition timing to see how it behaves.
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KENO
Grand Poobah Joined: June-06-2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 11112 |
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But the ignition timing starts at that camshaft that's not timed right with the crankshaft if you have a bunch of slop. It's kinda lagging behind
Whenever you move the distributor to adjust timing if you physically rotate the distributor 10 degrees for example, the crankshaft timing that you're looking at with the timing light will change by twice as much so you'll see 20 degrees of change since the camshaft is rotating at half of the crankshaft speed. I think you'll see a change for the better if you have too much slop now and it's taken care of with a new timing set.
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Hysteria
Groupie Joined: May-31-2020 Location: Indiana Status: Offline Points: 70 |
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It doesn't really matter how much you turn the distributor in relation to the camshaft because you don't reference any timing marks on the cam though. In your example, the timing changes by 20 degrees at the crank no matter how advanced or retarded your cam timing is. It's no different than people who run adjustable cam gears aside from the fact that the timing might walk back and forth a little due to the play in the chain.
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KENO
Grand Poobah Joined: June-06-2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 11112 |
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Whatever
I think your baseline or starting point has moved with the slop though.
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Hysteria
Groupie Joined: May-31-2020 Location: Indiana Status: Offline Points: 70 |
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I'll see how it looks when I get the new timing set in there. Whatever the case may be, I appreciate all your help and the info you provide on here
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KENO
Grand Poobah Joined: June-06-2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 11112 |
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Let's hope it's fixed or a lot better anyways
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Hysteria
Groupie Joined: May-31-2020 Location: Indiana Status: Offline Points: 70 |
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Installed the new timing set, but that wasn't the problem. Changing it out did advance my valve timing a ton though, so I'm interested to see how it does next time I'm on the water.
After the timing set didn't fix it, I went back to the ignition system, knowing that I had compression and being pretty confident that I had fuel. I knew I had spark from using the timing light and an inline spark tester, but I didn't know how strong it was. So, I bought an adjustable spark gap tester and sure enough, it was bad. Must have been just enough to trigger the timing light and inline test light. I checked the spark again right off the coil and it was jumping 1/2" gap with no issues, so I took a really close look at the distributor cap and found some carbon tracking between posts. When I installed the new cap this evening, it drastically changed the spark timing. I'm not entirely sure what was happening, but I'm guessing that the spark crossing over between posts in the cap was throwing my timing light way off and causing all the weirdness before. After putting it back at 10deg initial timing again, it fired right up and ran great in the driveway. |
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KENO
Grand Poobah Joined: June-06-2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 11112 |
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I guess we'll be waiting to hear that the timing advances from 10 BTDC to the low 30's and the engine revs to 4500 plus with the Acme 540 and runs 45 plus mph and all will be "right"
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fanofccfan
Platinum Member Joined: December-13-2009 Location: North Bend NE Status: Offline Points: 1781 |
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Isnt it awesome to fix things! Good work.
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2004 196 LE Ski 1969 Marauder 19 1978 Ski
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8122pbrainard
Grand Poobah Joined: September-14-2006 Location: Three Lakes Wi. Status: Offline Points: 41045 |
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Hysteria
Groupie Joined: May-31-2020 Location: Indiana Status: Offline Points: 70 |
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Boat ran well on the lake with no drama today. I adjusted the accelerator pump linkage and it's running the best it ever has with no hesitation or misfires. Still only getting about 37mph @4200rpm out of it, but I that may be due in part to my exhaust.
I checked the timing in the driveway before I left and it looked to be advancing another 20deg or so when I revved it up. The pertronix unit is back in the distributor now, it must have been a coincidence that the failing cap got a second wind when I reinstalled the points. I'm pretty happy with how it's running right now so I'll probably leave it alone and start fixing the little things until I'm done with it for the season. Appreciate all the suggestions and troubleshooting help from you guys by the way, there's a lot of knowledge on these boats floating around this site |
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8122pbrainard
Grand Poobah Joined: September-14-2006 Location: Three Lakes Wi. Status: Offline Points: 41045 |
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Isaac,
The 4200 isn't that bad but a few hundred more would be better. I don't recall if you mentioned what prop you are running. What is it as that could be the WOT RPM's issue. The 37 MPH, is that a GPS reading or from the speedo(s)?
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Hysteria
Groupie Joined: May-31-2020 Location: Indiana Status: Offline Points: 70 |
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It's a brand new Acme 540 and that reading is from GPS. On that note, if anyone knows where to get replacement gauge faces for the airguides, I would love to replace them. They are the off white style, which I think it a really classy look.
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KENO
Grand Poobah Joined: June-06-2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 11112 |
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Since you seem to be the inquisitive kind of guy that isn't afraid to investigate and then try something while getting the boat's issues straightened out, I think you should take off the FAE temporarily so you can see how much affect it has on your performance just so you know if the engine is running right I mean like what kind of guy (other than me and I'm not normal) puts the allegedly dead Pete-tronics module back in the distributor to see if it works after the cap change. (and it did) You're A-OK in my book Hysteria No FAE, you should be seeing 4500plus RPM and 45 plus MPH with that prop on your boat. Then you can reinstall the FAE, at least knowing what it's affect is on the performance and whether the engine/boat runs like it should before the FAE addition
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