Motor timing 180* out?
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- Olympic Peninsula
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- 1982 CJ5, 1978 258, T177, Dana 300, AMC 20, Dana 30
Make sure to count the pins. Its been my experience that AMC motors are not like SBC where you can just align the timing marks and you're good. The gears are farther apart and the marks are smaller. A small rotation to get the gear on to the shaft can leave you one pin off. I experienced this on my AMC 258 i6 / 4.2l overhaul. For the V8, after you get the gears installed you need to rotate the crank clockwise until the cam gear timing mark is at the 3 o'clock position. Then count the number of pins in the timing chain between the two timing marks. It should be 20. For the AMC 258 i6 / 4.2l , rotate the crank until the cam gear timing mark is at the 1 o'clock position. You should have 15 pins between the marks.I don't mean to hi-jack here Turbo, but I'm having the same issue right now on my initial start-up.
I am getting a "backfire" thru the carb, and actually blowing off one of my loose fitting vacuum hoses, manifold vac. I made my first attempt at starting my engine after my almost 4 year rebuild.
However, when I assembled the engine after a new timing chain and sprockets, I left it where the marks/dots on the sprockets lined up. This is also where the timing mark on the balancer was at zero and the front piston was at the top of the bore. When I inserted the dizzy the rotor was pointing at or close to plug wire #1. So that said I assume it's not out of time 180 degrees. Am I missing something? Can you offer some guidance for me?Could the dizzy just need rotated cw slightly?
I was one pin off and it caused backfire out the carb. It is a huge pain to get the cover back off!