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#806108 12/12/2011 8:23 PM
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She just died on me yesterday while driving and won't fire back up. I'm now trying to diagnose the problem.

The basics - 1951, 216, rebuilt carb, new 6v battery. Was running perfectly up until a month ago when it began hesitating, lean backfiring and stalling. Rebuilt carb installed and problem solved. Ran great until yesterday when she died and coasted to the shoulder.

The current issue - She turns over no problem, I can smell fuel and she puffs a bit occasionally like she's gonna fire up only to not and eventually backfire at the pipe. The starter rolls it with or without the coil wire just the same, so my guess is spark ... the occasional puff and/or backfire says its intermittent.
The plugs, points and cap are new and adjusted and the wires are new-ish so my guess is the coil. 6v coil ran on 8v for years by the previous owner, I'm guessing its just burnt up.

Also, The inside of the cap at the coil end of the wire that connects to the coil to the distributer is very oily and grimy. I replaced it with a new wire but it had no effect. ...still thinking bad coil.

Am I totally off base here or does this sound reasonable?

BLUEMEANIE #806110 12/12/2011 8:50 PM
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Pull the coil to distributor wire from the distributor cap and hold it (with insulated gloves or some protection) about 1/2" from the cap and turn the engine over. If you're getting a good output you might check the same connections at the plug wires to the cap and also at the wire to plug connections. I used to place an extra plug on the block and watch for spark.
If you get good fire all the way down to the plugs, pull them and check the gap or if they're fouled.
Working your way down should help point you to the culprit.
I bet a guru will chime in for you soon with some great advice.
Mine is merely shade-tree 101! wink
Good luck to you.
Jerry


1959 Chevy Apache 3200 Stepside
In the Stovebolt Gallery
Restoration Journal on Facebook

"A government that robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the support of Paul." ~ George Bernard Shaw
Hellomrwilson #806115 12/12/2011 9:10 PM
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The oil in the coil to distributer wire cap would still mean a new coil is in order, correct?

BLUEMEANIE #806368 12/13/2011 3:38 PM
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Sorry, missed your question...
Is the coil putting out at that the distributor cap connection?
If not or if weak, it's very possible the coil is fried, like you suspect.
At least it would be a quick fix.
Jerry


1959 Chevy Apache 3200 Stepside
In the Stovebolt Gallery
Restoration Journal on Facebook

"A government that robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the support of Paul." ~ George Bernard Shaw
Hellomrwilson #806369 12/13/2011 3:46 PM
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I'll have to check everything when it stops raining.

Would the senario I posted in the first post make sense if the coil was on its last leg?


BLUEMEANIE #806372 12/13/2011 3:58 PM
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yes it could be possible that the coil is bad.. especially if the oil has leaked out to where the internal windings are dry


Daniel

1953 Chevrolet 3800 Stepside

[url]http://s1086.photobucket.com/albums/j458/1953redchevy/
1953redchevy #806416 12/13/2011 6:17 PM
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Its old, definitely the original coil or close to it, and the wire is constantly wet no matter how often I clean it out. Its cheap enough, I should just replace it regardless.



BLUEMEANIE #806433 12/13/2011 7:43 PM
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You'll probably be pleasantly surprised at some new pep in your truck from replacing a weak or dying coil.
Jerry


1959 Chevy Apache 3200 Stepside
In the Stovebolt Gallery
Restoration Journal on Facebook

"A government that robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the support of Paul." ~ George Bernard Shaw
Hellomrwilson #807004 12/15/2011 7:16 AM
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New coil ordered. Now if it would just stop raining...

BLUEMEANIE #808290 12/19/2011 2:04 PM
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Replaced the coil ... nothing. Guess I'll check the cap, rotor and points next. Plugs and wires look good.

BLUEMEANIE #812106 01/01/2012 5:52 AM
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hey i had the same problem with a newer chvy v8 with points....found out it was just the condenser , actually a capaciter ... nothing to condense in distributor...google condenser see what i mean... try it , and clean and set points too....kev

kevin mac #812821 01/03/2012 5:07 PM
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Cool, I'll check it out. Thanks for the tip!

BLUEMEANIE #816859 01/16/2012 9:57 PM
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Finally got around to ordering another condenser. Hopefully this works.

Should the plug end of the coil be facing up or down on a '51 216? I've seen it both ways.

BLUEMEANIE #816894 01/16/2012 11:28 PM
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I've been having problems with condensers on the Deerslayer's Jimmy 302. They are Standard Motor Parts condensers for the 235 Chevy. I've had total condenser failure twice in the past four months. On this particular distributer the condenser is mounted on the outside so I can drift to the side of the road and change one in thirty seconds or so. I keep a spare along with wrench and screwdriver in the glove box just for such occasions. I still have two of the Standard Motor Parts condensers to go thru. Gonna try NAPA next time as they stock a different brand just to see if that makes a difference.


Larry Kephart
1937 Chevy Utility Express (Deerslayer)
1955 1st 3100 Chevy (BillyBob)
2017 Cadillac ATS-V (Elvira)
Boca Raton, Florida
e-mail: webmaster@laroke.com

http://www.laroke.com/larryk4674/1998/billybob.htm
LAROKE #816918 01/17/2012 12:18 AM
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One other thing to check is to see if the rotor is turning when the engine when engine is. To check, remove distributor cap and turn over motor and see if the rotor moves, if not turning, the pin that holds the gear to the shaft has sheared, or try turning the rotor by hand.


Keep the 216's running. 1949 1/2 ton model #1314 (US 3104) Brian
hippy #817808 01/19/2012 5:09 PM
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Excellent suggestions guys! Thanks!

BLUEMEANIE #818244 01/21/2012 4:32 AM
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Go back to what Hellomwilson said in the beginning, Check where you have a spark and where it may stop.

You wanted to replace the coil anyway right?

Either there is a spark or not at the plugs. if there is one, pour a little fuel in the carb. Been there and I thought it was the coil too.

Bruce GMC #818343 01/21/2012 4:42 PM
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Not meaning to hijack this thread cause there is lots of great suggestions here, but are all 6V coils the same (interchangeable) or do I need one specifically made for my engine??

Thanks

Kip


1941 Chevy Master 3/4-Ton
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Born to fish, the truck is only a hobby.
Kip's41 #818674 01/22/2012 7:35 PM
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BlueMeanie,
Any update to your problem? Just curious how this turned out!
Thanks,
Andy

Saint #818995 01/23/2012 8:02 PM
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Still working at it. Haven't had a chance to get back into the garage lately.

BLUEMEANIE #821139 01/30/2012 2:45 PM
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Well, we got a warm day yesterday so a couple friends and I pushed the truck out to work on it. Everything looked fine and she is getting spark but I still cannot get her started.
I finally got a chance to pull the plugs in the day light and they were BLACK. Covered in carbon. I sanded them clean and re-gapped them but still nothing but a couple backfires thru the intake and one loud one from the tail pipe.
I also noticed that there was fuel spitting from the pivot on the carb (freshly rebuilt Rochester) whenever I'd work the accelerator pedal.

...is it possible that my a/f mix is just so off that the truck won't run?

BLUEMEANIE #821173 01/30/2012 4:22 PM
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Was it running before?


1948 3100
1948 Fleetline Areo
1951 Suburban Carryall ( http://photobucket.com/51Burb )
1957 3100
" Tell me who U Hang with & I'll Tell U who You are "!
Phoenician71 #821176 01/30/2012 4:28 PM
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Yeah. It ran great.
The first post in this thread has more details about how it died.

Quote from firs post in thread...
Originally Posted by BLUEMEANIE
She just died on me yesterday while driving and won't fire back up. I'm now trying to diagnose the problem.

The basics - 1951, 216, rebuilt carb, new 6v battery. Was running perfectly up until a month ago when it began hesitating, lean backfiring and stalling. Rebuilt carb installed and problem solved. Ran great until yesterday when she died and coasted to the shoulder.

The current issue - She turns over no problem, I can smell fuel and she puffs a bit occasionally like she's gonna fire up only to not and eventually backfire at the pipe. The starter rolls it with or without the coil wire just the same, so my guess is spark ... the occasional puff and/or backfire says its intermittent.
The plugs, points and cap are new and adjusted and the wires are new-ish so my guess is the coil. 6v coil ran on 8v for years by the previous owner, I'm guessing its just burnt up.

Also, The inside of the cap at the coil end of the wire that connects to the coil to the distributer is very oily and grimy. I replaced it with a new wire but it had no effect. ...still thinking bad coil.


So far I've replaced the coil wire, coil and condenser and I am getting spark at the plugs. The plugs were black and sooty as of yesterday. They've been cleaned and gapped.
The carburetor was purchased as rebuilt and the seller said he had tested it on a 235 with an adapter. I installed it and it ran great so I didn't mess with it.

BLUEMEANIE #821244 01/30/2012 9:21 PM
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Is the distributor timing clamp tight? If not, maybe the distibutor has moved, throwing the timing off.

Dale



When I die, I want to go peacefully like my Grandfather did, in his sleep -- not screaming, like the passengers in his car.
-Unknown-
di1953gmc #821246 01/30/2012 9:26 PM
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Also, I would perform a rough check to assure the #1 cylinder is at TDC when the distributor rotor is aligned with the #1 plug wire position. This would tell you if the timing is close.

Dale


When I die, I want to go peacefully like my Grandfather did, in his sleep -- not screaming, like the passengers in his car.
-Unknown-
di1953gmc #821251 01/30/2012 9:35 PM
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Lastly, you don't say anything about the points. Have you checked or replaced them? Is the gap close to being in spec? I believe it is .016" to .021". Is the clamp screw tight? Do they look burnt or pitted?

Dale


When I die, I want to go peacefully like my Grandfather did, in his sleep -- not screaming, like the passengers in his car.
-Unknown-
di1953gmc #821264 01/30/2012 10:08 PM
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Points, cap, rotor, etc, are all new-ish and timing was just set by another stovebolt member and myself. Unless the dizzy moved I can't imagine they're off. ...but I'll check asap.

BLUEMEANIE #821269 01/30/2012 10:29 PM
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OK. I assume you set the timing when it was running. Correct?

Since you cannot check the timing now,
did you check the point gap after it stopped working? I'm not doubting you or your previous efforts, but something has changed and we need to start with the basics and work up. You stated earlier that you have fire at plugs and gas in the carb, so logically it has to be timing. Also the backfiring points to timing.




When I die, I want to go peacefully like my Grandfather did, in his sleep -- not screaming, like the passengers in his car.
-Unknown-
di1953gmc #821885 02/01/2012 4:53 PM
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Originally Posted by di1953gmc
Is the distributor timing clamp tight? If not, maybe the distibutor has moved, throwing the timing off.

Dale

I think you may be on to something...
What is this part...
http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7020/6801172421_345f7eaa7b_o.jpg
It is currently hitting the push rod cover. Don't remember it doing that when I reinstalled it and did the timing.

Hopefully I can get under the hood this weekend and check it out when I have some daylight.

This would also explain some issues I noticed before installing the new carburetor.

BLUEMEANIE #821958 02/01/2012 8:38 PM
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I cannot open your picture because I'm on a restricted PC right now. However, the only part on the distributor that could be hitting the push rod cover, is the grease cup. The grease cup is "a cup full of grease" that you periodically turn to push out some grease to lube the distributor shaft.

I think you need to realign the distributor with the #1 cylinder TDC, reset the timing and tighten the clamp.

Good luck,
Dale


When I die, I want to go peacefully like my Grandfather did, in his sleep -- not screaming, like the passengers in his car.
-Unknown-
di1953gmc #821962 02/01/2012 8:52 PM
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Yep. Thats gotta be what it is and I think you're right, I need to realign the distributor with the #1 cylinder TDC, reset the timing and tighten the clamp.

BLUEMEANIE #822565 02/03/2012 6:12 PM
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Does it crank normaly? You didnt loose a timming gear did you?

retired wrench #822587 02/03/2012 7:27 PM
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Yeah. Cranks just fine.

Gonna try to get out to the garage this afternoon.

BLUEMEANIE #836261 03/18/2012 9:57 AM
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SHE'S ALLIVE!!!!!!

Finally found some free time to get out to the garage. ...ended up having to take a week long vacation with nothing planned. It poured all day but we got her running.

We (myself and a vintage RX7 enthusiast) redid the timing from the ground up. I was correct, the dizzy came loose and spun so we had to pull it out completely, reset the oil pump gear, replace the rotor, re-gap the points and plugs then reassemble correctly, time with a light and adjust idle at the carburetor. We dialed everything in 100 times better than it ever has been since I, and I would imagine the previous owner, have owned it.

The rain let up for a bit so we took her out for a spin around the park then grabbed our other cars and went for a celebratory burger and beer. Good times!


Moderated by  Jon G, Rusty Rod 

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