On 12/31/2021 7:45, Snag wrote:
On 12/30/2021 9:55 PM, Michael Trew wrote:
Aforementioned 1968 Ford Galaxie 302 engine won't start. It cranks
over just fine, but won't try to catch or even "pop off" just once.
Seems exactly like a no-spark condition.
It's been a wet day, so I popped the distributor cap, but no
condensation. Wiped off the metal parts and rotor anyway (not dirty).
I pulled a random plug wire and put a spark tester on it, resting on
the block. It sure lit up, that cylinder had spark.
Drats... I really thought that the coil went, but it still has spark
to the distributor cap. I dumped a bit of fuel down the throttle. No
difference. Cranks just fine, but it won't even pop as if it were
trying to catch; not even on one cylinder.
I guess I'll try again in the morning. Any ideas? How ironic that I
get stumped like this, after posting a couple of times today how old
cars are so much easier to work on... LOL. Thanks in advance.
How many miles on the timing chain ? Put a timing light on it and see
when the spark occurs .
Thanks all. I considered timing after I went to bed. Same issue in the morning when cranking. Late this afternoon, I came back to tear into
it, but it fired right up, how odd.
I pulled each spark plug afterward, and they weren't bad looking. I
sanded them down, checked the gap to about .035. I also took a brass
wire brush to the contacts inside of the distributor cap. All in all,
it's actually running a bit more smoothly than before. Plugs are wires
didn't look too old.
I'll be in for a carburetor rebuild not too long from now. Probably a
fuel filter also. It starts to die when you first get into the
throttle, unless you feather it. It was sitting in a garage for
decades. I guess the last guy did a quick tuneup and got bored.
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