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Fixing the old truck

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Bond Villain
Bond Villain
Joined: Nov 1995
Posts: 5,470
Can anyone tell me the correct plugs (and gaps) for a '65 305 V-6? The engine is in a 4000 series (ton and a half).

The engine is not running quite as smoothly as it should and has a little bit of a miss. I am going to pull the plugs to check the gaps, porcelain for chips & cracks, etc. But I have no idea what the gaps are supposed to be, actually ...

A quick recap -- The engine has new cap, rotor, points, condenser, coil, wires and plugs. Also, a freshly rebuild carb with a new mechanical fuel pump with a brand new electric back up (On the way to a show last year, the truck's mechanical pump failed and packed the crab full of diaphram bits, caused an engine fire and caused a lot of issues going home most of which have been corrected now except for this missing. A professional truck mechanic did the compression test, rebuilt the carb and double checked the timing and point gap. We have not yet pulled the plugs and double checked them.

Thanks,
John


~ John

"We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven; that which we are, we are"

1948 International Farmall Super A
1949 Chevrolet 3804
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W
Riding in the Passing Lane
Riding in the Passing Lane
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I can get them tomorrow John if no one comes up with it between now & then. George


They say money can't buy happiness. It can buy old Chevy trucks though. Same thing.
1972 Chevy c10 Cheyenne Super
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O
Shop Shark
Shop Shark
O Offline
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here you go john i just dodged the rain drops out to the shop c44ns plugs and .035 gap

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5
Shop Shark
Shop Shark
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Just a thought - when was the last time you adjusted the valves?


David Colter
pics * 1954 wrecker * [color:#009900]1948 Chevy 1-Ton[/color]
No act of kindness - no matter how small - is ever wasted ~~ Aesop
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N
Shop Shark
Shop Shark
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Old Dog & George -- Thanks -- I hope nobody got too wet. Was that AC-Delco on the plugs?

David -- Good question. They've not been adjusted since I've owned the truck and may not have ever been adjusted since they were set on the assembly line. Remember -- the truck has 10,000 miles on it -- 2,000 since I've owned it. What should they be set at?

v/r
John


~ One of many.
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'Bolter
'Bolter
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Valves don't usually get too tight on their own, which would be the only way they would cause a miss. If they were too loose then they would be obvious, too much noise,
Scott


Scott Ward

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Shop Shark
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I thought that a loose exhaust rocker could cause the engine to run rough, and it seemed like one thing not already done.

John, I have no idea what they would be set at - just talking shop and learning from the best.


David Colter
pics * 1954 wrecker * [color:#009900]1948 Chevy 1-Ton[/color]
No act of kindness - no matter how small - is ever wasted ~~ Aesop
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O
Shop Shark
Shop Shark
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yea that was ac delco ,i didn't worry to much there wasn't any soap in it .

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Wrench Fetcher
Wrench Fetcher
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Here's a copy of a page out of my '72 GMC 4500-9500 owners manual.
http://image62.webshots.com/662/7/43/48/2348743480103559715JDkNRV_fs.jpg

if you need more let me know.


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