I need help diagnosing a tach problem with my '70. Here's the situation:
- The distributor was rebuilt by a third party (see my separate thread about this). The main-shaft, its bushings, cross-gear, coupling were renewed.
- Installed distributor and the tach worked great. (Note: For years before this, car was not started, then operated with tach cable disconnected from the distributor because the stripped cross-gear was removed).
- After 2 hours of run time, I removed then reinstalled the distributor to properly re-clock its position. (I actually re-clocked the position of the cables on the cap, then moved the dist's driven gear one tooth relative to the cam. Before and after this, the distributor housing was oriented per AIM, with the cap's screws at about 11 o'clock and 5 o'clock, and the VAC pointing at 3 o'clock [almost directly to the right]. The tach cable has almost no bend as it comes out of the distributor.)
- The tach needle then developed a "tick"- the needle would dip for a moment every second or so.
- I unscrewed the tach cable from the distributor, checked cable for free rotation by hand; reconnected tach cable. The cable seems to insert into the cross gear with no issues, and the cable housing's end collar fully seats on the cross-gear's brass coupling. The tach then worked fine for about 20 minutes, then developed its "tick" again.
- With the engine running, I moved the position of the cable about a 1/4" where it goes behind the LH cylinder head. The tach then stopped working completely.
- I disconnected then reconnected the tach cable from the distributor again. Within about 5 minutes after starting, the tach went from working fine, to having a "tick" at one second intervals, to not working at all.
What's causing this? Is this a problem with the distributor's tach drive, the cable, or the tach itself?
- The distributor was rebuilt by a third party (see my separate thread about this). The main-shaft, its bushings, cross-gear, coupling were renewed.
- Installed distributor and the tach worked great. (Note: For years before this, car was not started, then operated with tach cable disconnected from the distributor because the stripped cross-gear was removed).
- After 2 hours of run time, I removed then reinstalled the distributor to properly re-clock its position. (I actually re-clocked the position of the cables on the cap, then moved the dist's driven gear one tooth relative to the cam. Before and after this, the distributor housing was oriented per AIM, with the cap's screws at about 11 o'clock and 5 o'clock, and the VAC pointing at 3 o'clock [almost directly to the right]. The tach cable has almost no bend as it comes out of the distributor.)
- The tach needle then developed a "tick"- the needle would dip for a moment every second or so.
- I unscrewed the tach cable from the distributor, checked cable for free rotation by hand; reconnected tach cable. The cable seems to insert into the cross gear with no issues, and the cable housing's end collar fully seats on the cross-gear's brass coupling. The tach then worked fine for about 20 minutes, then developed its "tick" again.
- With the engine running, I moved the position of the cable about a 1/4" where it goes behind the LH cylinder head. The tach then stopped working completely.
- I disconnected then reconnected the tach cable from the distributor again. Within about 5 minutes after starting, the tach went from working fine, to having a "tick" at one second intervals, to not working at all.
What's causing this? Is this a problem with the distributor's tach drive, the cable, or the tach itself?

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