polara71
Old Man with a Hat
where would that be located?
On the firewall.
where would that be located?
Could I disconnect the advance and drive that way to test it out? What is a good way to test it?
I took some pics not the greatest but still decent, which part is supposed to move? Looks like an electrical connector attached to the block in back
View attachment 698613
OK, you can't see MUCH of your mech advance weights from just the top of your distributor after pulling the cap off, but I'll school you a little tonight.
That pointy looking collar below the rotor is called the "reluctor." The little solenoid with its flat surface facing those points picks up a weak current as the reluctor point passes by. This is referred to as the "Hall Effect" and is just induced current in that little solenoid. Your "electronic ignition" (the orange box w the big heat sunk transistor on the top surface) connects to that solenoid, gets the little induced current pulse induced by the reluctor, amplifies the **** out of that, then sends a strong square wave to your coil, which in turn multiplies the pulse by a couple thousand volts each time and sends it back to your rotor, which hopefully passes that high voltage pulse to your spark plugs. You need BRASS feeler gauge blades to gap your reluctor with that little square solenoid properly, as these things have permanent magnets, which will grab ordinary steel feeler gauge blades.
NOW, as a safety measure, you should spray sp,e penetrant/displacer/light machine oil into the advance weights underneath the plate. This was called a "breaker plate" from the halcyon days of breaker POINTS, but the phrase isn't quite appropriate for a Hall Effect distrubutor. I think its still called that though.... I recommend CLP Break Free for your advance weights. I recommend you get another distributor even more. That one looks in need of The Hopster's (halifaxhops) expert work! Get one AND his manual on electronic ignition. You REALLY NEED TO KNOW THIS ****!!!!!
You don't need a new distributor and it's not the ballast resistor.Thx for the info !
If I did get a different distributor which would you recommend?
Also, with regard to the advance weights, are they underneath the rotor, i.e. not right on top like in the GM cars? That might be why I thought they were stuck
Thx for the info !
If I did get a different distributor which would you recommend?
Also, with regard to the advance weights, are they underneath the rotor, i.e. not right on top like in the GM cars? That might be why I thought they were stuck
Get one from Halifaxhops, on our forum. Look under For Sale - Mopar refurbished distributors
DON'T **** around with any shiny new ****. The Hopster will do you right! Get a modest "electronic ignition" one appropriate to your car. THEN, save the one you have, get Mr. Halifaxhops electronic distributor MANUAL, clean up what you have, and keep it handy. Having ONE SPARE distributor ALWAYS is a GOOD idea. Keep it in your trunk.
Regardless of how many you might wind up owning, NEVER RUN such a sorry, dirty mess as you have NOW! Replace your cap and rotor, and clean the damn thing up. Get that brass bladed feeler gauge and gap your reluctor properly. There is NO electrical contact issue in this sensible, simple device, but it must be gapped. With a nice new cap and rotor, you'll be AMAZED at how much better that engine runs.
Pity you can't print up a sheet of C-notes and fly me up to do this **** for you. As an out and out pedagogue (and public masticator!) I enjoy teaching folks simple stuff like this. With the Hopster's manual and the right FSM as your texts, you can go to Old Mopar Skool!
NOT a GM...advance springs and weights are located under the breaker plate and distributor would need to be disassembled to have access to them...if you grab the rotor you should be able to twist it a bit (like maybe 1/4 to 1/2 an inch at the tip) and when released it should spring back to its original position if weights and springs are operational
yesGot it, will give that a try thx
To remove the rotor to replace it you just pull it up, right?