georgethompson730 wrote:Tony, Without anything to compare them to how do you tell if your springs are not what they should be? Having said that I don't believe mine have ever been changed.
George
Hi George, Thanks for that. 2 things to try. (
This is for the 1850 A.C. Delco unit ) If you take the dizzy cap and rotor arm off ( 2 screws ) you'll find the springs underneath. The first question is... if you rotate the outer co-axial bit of the distributor shaft by hand and release it does it return by itself to the static position with a slight click. If so , that is a good start. If it flops about and settles in all sorts of random positions when released then the springs have gone weak. First thing to do is remove the weights & springs, clean them and re-assemble with a tiny smear of lubricant.
Put the cap back on.
For a dynamic test use a strobe timing light. I have a really nice Gunson's unit with a calibrated degree setting.
Disconnect the vacuum advance pipe at the dizzy. At a slow idle < 650 rpm measure the static timing. This should be the book figure of 11 deg BTDC.
Now note the exact timing figure you get in degrees BTDC.
Increase the engine RPM to 1500 rpm. You should get static + 7 to 11 degrees. ( 18 to 22 degrees if static set correctly )
At 2400 rpm you should get static + 10 to 14 degrees ( 21 to 25 degrees actual )
At 3500rpm you should get static + 13 to 17 degrees ( 24 to 28 degrees )
If your timing figures are in these limits then your dizzy advance springs are working fine, and no rectification is needed.
Re-connect the vacuum advance pipe.
Yes I know I promised to write up the results of the springs I obtained but unfortunatly I have a more urgent "project" to manage right now.
HTH,
Tony.