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Rescue Diver
Full Time Jeeper
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- Kansas City
- Vehicle(s)
- 1979 CJ-7 with a fiberglass body and 1982 wide track axles, 258 I-6 with a 1995 4.0 head, HEI distributor, Motorcraft 2100 Carb, T-18 wide ratio tranny, Super Lift Springs and 33s, a 1997 BMW 328i, and a 2010 REDLINE CONQUEST TEAM Cyclocross Bike. :)
sure...
see post #19 this thread.
also posted on your thread on the HEI
Has pics and user name... I was also involved when the user had his engine failure.
I re read #19 and I again see your claim that the hardened gear damages V8 and I-6, and I again see the link to junkyardgenius. Is that page where I will find the I-6 case study?
Ok, after re re reading the page, the part at the very bottom adresses I-6. It has nothing to do with it eating the I-6 cam gear because it's too soft. He's saying the distributor gear doesn't line up correctly with the cam gear when doing an HEI swap on an I-6. I have no way of testing this for myself because my distributor was sold to me as a single unit with a special gear already installed to allow the HEI to work in my AMC 258 i6 / 4.2l . Mine seems to line up ok, and I pulled the distributor a couple times over the thousands of miles I've put on it and the gears still looks brand new.
What I have to disagree with as far as the comments on that page regarding tuning are as follows.
"10. Tunability.
B.You CAN NOT adjust the total amount of advance or retard in the centrifugal system of a factory GM HEI.
There is no provision for changing the total centrifugal timing.
You will have to remove the distributor, dissasemble the distributor, and use an aftermarket kit or grind, drill and relocat parts to change the totals of the centrifugal system.
Motorcraft distributors all have at least one centrifugal change built into them, and it can be accessed in 60 seconds with out removing the distriubutor.
This total tuning change can be custom set with a file or small grinder by the user with out removing the distributor from the vehicle."
This one stumps me? For starters, you would only need to grind or drill on an HEI if you wanted more than 24 degrees of mechanical advance, which I doubt any AMC 258 i6 / 4.2l owner would want. And why is it better to grind or file on a Motorcraft distributor than on an HEI?
"C.In a factory GM HEI there is no tuning of the vacuum advance. Peroid.
GM made NO provision for either tuning or limiting the vacuum advance from the factory."
False, or at the very least nit picking because adjustable ones are available and cheap. GM has different vaccum advance modules available and they're stamped with how many degrees they advance. Furthermore, adjustable Vaccum Advance modules are available just about anywhere that simply take an allen wrench to adjust.
I'm sorry but it's obvious that the site we've been discussing has a bias towards other distributors than an HEI. I'd really be interested to see if there is any other web site that can be found that will back up the claims?
I wouldn't go to the Huffington Post to get reliable info on Republicans after all.
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