Re: 65 L78 initial timing
Duke,
Your CF post and other articles by you on this topic provide a great step-by-step guide which will help ensure the distributor is oriented as originally installed by the factory.
A couple of quibbles about the quote above and this statement on the CF thread you mentioned:
(No GM service literature mentions proper dimple orientation, which has resulted in MILLIONS of improper distributor assemblies over the years and without proper gear installation, proper distributor installation is IMPOSSIBLE, and there are still plenty out there, today!) Improper distributor assembly and/or installation is likely to result in not being able to achieve proper timing and/or significant operational problems. The engine might run, but likely not very well!
No "rotor-cap tower misalignment" issues or timing issues or operational problems occur if the distributor housing is clocked differently, or if the plug wires are clocked differently in the cap, or if the drive gear is installed with the dimple 180 degrees from the rotor tip. These changes just result in a different housing orientation in relation to the engine.
Sometimes a "custom" distributor orientation is desired for things to fit, for example when swapping a Chevy engine into a different chassis...Vega, Corvair, Jag, whatever. In these cases, flipping the drive gear, changing the wire orientation or dropping the housing in a different orientation can sometimes help with clearances and/or make wire routing easier.
Another example with Corvettes- I've occasionally changed the clocking of the distributor to straighten the tach cable after the distributor was recurved.
With this said and to your point, an owner who doesn't really know what they're doing can run into interference problems when they twist the distributor to adjust timing with a non-original orientation.
Duke,
Your CF post and other articles by you on this topic provide a great step-by-step guide which will help ensure the distributor is oriented as originally installed by the factory.
A couple of quibbles about the quote above and this statement on the CF thread you mentioned:
(No GM service literature mentions proper dimple orientation, which has resulted in MILLIONS of improper distributor assemblies over the years and without proper gear installation, proper distributor installation is IMPOSSIBLE, and there are still plenty out there, today!) Improper distributor assembly and/or installation is likely to result in not being able to achieve proper timing and/or significant operational problems. The engine might run, but likely not very well!
No "rotor-cap tower misalignment" issues or timing issues or operational problems occur if the distributor housing is clocked differently, or if the plug wires are clocked differently in the cap, or if the drive gear is installed with the dimple 180 degrees from the rotor tip. These changes just result in a different housing orientation in relation to the engine.
Sometimes a "custom" distributor orientation is desired for things to fit, for example when swapping a Chevy engine into a different chassis...Vega, Corvair, Jag, whatever. In these cases, flipping the drive gear, changing the wire orientation or dropping the housing in a different orientation can sometimes help with clearances and/or make wire routing easier.
Another example with Corvettes- I've occasionally changed the clocking of the distributor to straighten the tach cable after the distributor was recurved.
With this said and to your point, an owner who doesn't really know what they're doing can run into interference problems when they twist the distributor to adjust timing with a non-original orientation.
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