All I can say is thanks!
I pulled out of the driveway Thursday morning to make a trip to mayben land. I had to pull over 6 times on our street because the thing kept dying.
I finally got it to stay running and made the trip. When I arrived in leaburg, I pulled over on the side of the road to turn around and it kept dying on me. I could not get it to go at all without dying. Luckily I could simi-coast through a driveway to the road I needed and into his driveway. I pulled in to the shop and turned the engine off. The backfire that I had my ears plugged and ready for, scared the crap out of Mike.
We looked it over for a couple hours and then Mike lovingly gripped that distributor and adjusted it in meaningful way. This seemed to pep up the engine up. We spent time dialing that distributor in until it was just right, adjusting the idle as well.
Once the ignition sounded tuned in we moved to the carb. The carb is to remain untouched until you dial the ignition in or you will just end up chasing your tail all over the place. The carb needed the mixture drastically changed and once it was set, that virgin Scout purred like a kitty-kat.
We then went to put it on the analyzer, which I was very interested to see, however it was not working for some reason. I really wanted to see that old school scope show something.
Anyway... Mike wanted to do a little "power timing" (see
http://www.forums.IHPartsAmerica.co...es-pertronix-require-timing-readjustment.html) to finish it up. We did a revised version of this since I had an automatic. He did what he did, and I am not sure I actually "heard" what it was.
With everything we did up there Thursday, it was all "by ear". No timing lights were used. Frankly, who cares what the timing light says. It is a smoothing running engine you want not a number. I have tried setting it to the spec in the service manual and it ran like a cat with only a one front and one back leg and no tail. Crappy!
After all was done, Mike made me feel like a king with all the talk of my virgin 1972 Scout and how strong the engine sounded. I can't thank you enough.
Now I need to get that "gun shy" mind set out of my head. There are a lot of you out there that know what I am talking about. You warm your Scout up for an hour, you drive all over the place on "safe" streets before hitting the freeway on-ramp, you wait forever before pulling out into traffic and you pump the heck out of the gas peddle any time you accelerate from a stop so it doesn't die. That is how I had to drive. Living in fear.
Some of you May think that is it, give up and parkit for a while or indefinitely. In all reality, you just need to tune it in by ignition first then carb. I have got to get rid of this fear of stalling. My Scout did not fail me once that long trip home. I can reach in through the window, turn the key and it start without pumping the gas pedal 5 hundred times. The fear is leaving, but it takes a whole new mind set.
Now I can focus on the oil leak... As he will attest... Is overly excessive. Thanks for teaching me so that I can now do it.
Pictures of my Scout can be found at my gallery:
ihc Scout II photo gallery | heath mcconnell