Scoutboy74
Moderator
This is going to be long winded. You've been warned. Here's the sitcheeyeashun:
1965 Scout 80 with 152 and Holley straight points diz.
I was trying to verify and re-gap the points. I encountered difficulty in getting the gap to stay put after tightening down the adjustment screw. I removed the points and discovered the plastic breaker plate had cracks around both the brass threaded inserts where the points attach. I figured the cracks were allowing just enough spring action to defeat any gap settings. After predictable failures to locate a replacement plastic breaker plate, I decided to improvise. I had an IH app curved points dizzy out of a '73 304. I removed the all metal breaker plate and points from it and swapped them in to the 4-popper unit. My thinking was this would be a serviceable way of eliminating the worn plastic part. The first issue I ran into was the stud for the vac advance arm located in the "cw" position was not in the proper location. A trip to the hardware store for 72 cents worth of parts allowed me to fashion a home-spun stud which I mounted in the hole labeled "ccw". I verified the advance can was functional and installed it. After filing out the mounting holes on the curved points to allow the contact pad to reach the smaller diameter 4 cyl lobe, I carefully set the gap to .014, buttoned everything up and turned on the juice. I did not have access to a dwell meter, nor did I have my timing light, so I made minor timing adjustments by ear with the engine running and the vac advance line plugged off. The engine seemed to be running very well throughout the rpm range. I shut it down, tightened the dizzy hold down bolt and connected the steel vac advance line. Refired the engine and noticed it was running very poorly with the vac advance line connected, so I plugged it off and sure enough, performance improved. So after all that build up, here's the questions. Did I pull a
by installing parts from an 8 cylinder dizzy into a 4? Is there a rotational difference between the two? The only thing I can figure is I've introduced a vacuum retard instead of an advance, but it's just a theory until I can prove/disprove with a timing light. Is there a source for the plastic straight points breaker plate? Tia for any help in this matter.
1965 Scout 80 with 152 and Holley straight points diz.
I was trying to verify and re-gap the points. I encountered difficulty in getting the gap to stay put after tightening down the adjustment screw. I removed the points and discovered the plastic breaker plate had cracks around both the brass threaded inserts where the points attach. I figured the cracks were allowing just enough spring action to defeat any gap settings. After predictable failures to locate a replacement plastic breaker plate, I decided to improvise. I had an IH app curved points dizzy out of a '73 304. I removed the all metal breaker plate and points from it and swapped them in to the 4-popper unit. My thinking was this would be a serviceable way of eliminating the worn plastic part. The first issue I ran into was the stud for the vac advance arm located in the "cw" position was not in the proper location. A trip to the hardware store for 72 cents worth of parts allowed me to fashion a home-spun stud which I mounted in the hole labeled "ccw". I verified the advance can was functional and installed it. After filing out the mounting holes on the curved points to allow the contact pad to reach the smaller diameter 4 cyl lobe, I carefully set the gap to .014, buttoned everything up and turned on the juice. I did not have access to a dwell meter, nor did I have my timing light, so I made minor timing adjustments by ear with the engine running and the vac advance line plugged off. The engine seemed to be running very well throughout the rpm range. I shut it down, tightened the dizzy hold down bolt and connected the steel vac advance line. Refired the engine and noticed it was running very poorly with the vac advance line connected, so I plugged it off and sure enough, performance improved. So after all that build up, here's the questions. Did I pull a
