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wornn out big block timing question #1987935
01/10/16 09:52 PM
01/10/16 09:52 PM
Joined: Sep 2007
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Spahn Ranch
RMCHRGR Offline OP
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My buddy and I spent the better part of toady messing with his beat up old '64 880. Pretty much every part of this car is worn out, beat up, shot or on it's last legs. Regardless, he drives it all the time and it made the 30 + mile trip to my house without incident.

It' got the original 361 with a '65 383 4 barrel intake, 906 heads, stock distributor with a Pertronix module, exhaust manifolds and this weekend we switched out the ancient non-PCV AFB that was on it for a #80457 Holley 600 to gain the PCV. It's a push button auto and highway gears.

So after putting the Holley on, the car would not start/run/accelerate without a ton of ignition advance. We tuned it the shade tree way by ear, twisting the distributor to where it sounded right. Regardless, the distributor was really advanced, seemed like almost 30 degrees initial based on where the vacuum can was pointed. We probably need a limiter plate in the distributor to keep the total down to a reasonable level because it runs real hot now with all the advance.

We had plenty of fuel and the plugs looked somewhat normal - not covered in soot or totally leaned out.

We also fixed all sorts of peripheral stuff including vacuum leaks, ground wires, burned plug wires and throttle rod/linkage adjustments hoping we'd see a major change and not have to run so much advance but nothing made a difference.

So heres the question - why does an ancient, worn out big block with a 4 barrel intake and a Holley 600 need so much timing advance? What could we have missed?

Thanks for any input.

- Greg


'71 Duster
'17 Ram 1500
Re: wornn out big block timing question [Re: RMCHRGR] #1987949
01/10/16 10:09 PM
01/10/16 10:09 PM
Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 5,161
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GTX MATT Offline
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I'd guess a vacuum leak between the carb and intake, or something wrong with the carb. Is it new?

Also check/adjust the floats correctly, they could be way high or way low.

Last edited by GTX MATT; 01/10/16 10:10 PM.

Now I need to pin those needles, got to feel that heat
Hear my motor screamin while I'm tearin up the street
Re: wornn out big block timing question [Re: RMCHRGR] #1987967
01/10/16 10:22 PM
01/10/16 10:22 PM
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Spahn Ranch
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Carb is basically brand new. I had it on my truck for maybe an hour of run time and went back to a 750. We had to use an adapter to put the Holley on the old AFB intake. We suspected/found a vacuum leak at one point and fixed it but no significant change in regards to the timing.

Floats are set correctly, trickles out the sight plug when you undo the sight plug. We actually raised them at one point, the fuel would slosh going around a corner and momentarily stall. Raised the float and it was fine. Didn't touch the secondary side.

Forgot to mention, there is a BAD valve tick on the pass. side, not sure which cylinder but it's loud and always present. Definitely mechanical, not an exhaust leak. We had a vacuum gauge on it and it was pretty steady. Has about 13" at idle.


'71 Duster
'17 Ram 1500
Re: wornn out big block timing question [Re: RMCHRGR] #1987996
01/10/16 11:00 PM
01/10/16 11:00 PM
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Posts: 870
Keizer, Oregon U.S.A.
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elmor353 Offline
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Sounds like you still have a vacuum leak somewhere.

Re: wornn out big block timing question [Re: elmor353] #1987999
01/10/16 11:02 PM
01/10/16 11:02 PM
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Keizer, Oregon U.S.A.
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elmor353 Offline
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A worn timing chain would throw your timing off.

Re: wornn out big block timing question [Re: RMCHRGR] #1988005
01/10/16 11:07 PM
01/10/16 11:07 PM
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Utah and Alaska
astjp2 Offline
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Timing marks are off? Check it with a vacuum gauge...


1941 Taylorcraft
1968 Charger
1994 Wrangler
1998 Wrangler
2008 Kia Rio
2017 Jetta

I didn't do 4 years and 9 months of Graduate School to be called Mister!
Re: wornn out big block timing question [Re: RMCHRGR] #1988010
01/10/16 11:10 PM
01/10/16 11:10 PM
Joined: Mar 2006
Posts: 9,835
MI, usa
dvw Offline
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With out a timing light you have no idea where the timing is. Being It's been apart who knows if the distributor was put back in the original location? Does it crank slow? If it's really has 30 degrees initial I would expect it to crank slow. Nobody has a timing light?
Doug

Re: wornn out big block timing question [Re: RMCHRGR] #1988035
01/10/16 11:30 PM
01/10/16 11:30 PM
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 14,889
up yours
Supercuda Offline
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Why would one have to even mess with the timing if all you did was a carb swap?

Shouldn't have needed to and any running difference would be slight, assuming nothing else wrong.

The AFB should have had PCV provisions, since it didn't it had the wrong carb on to begin with.

PCV leans out the mixture unless tuned for it, which this Holley carb should have been close.

Does putting the old carb back on fix the issue?

Get a timing light.


They say there are no such thing as a stupid question.
They say there is always the exception that proves the rule.
Don't be the exception.
Re: wornn out big block timing question [Re: RMCHRGR] #1988044
01/10/16 11:35 PM
01/10/16 11:35 PM
Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 4,951
northwest USA
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NANKET Offline
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Does this 880 have solid throttle linkage that pushes forward instead of pulling back.

That 64 engine with 906 head is giving away lots of compression, does it have blue feel pro head gaskets also?

Re: wornn out big block timing question [Re: RMCHRGR] #1988087
01/11/16 12:25 AM
01/11/16 12:25 AM
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 32,930
Grand Prairie,Texas
stumpy Offline
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13 seems low for a basic stock engine.

Re: wornn out big block timing question [Re: NANKET] #1988093
01/11/16 12:32 AM
01/11/16 12:32 AM
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Posts: 36,040
Lincoln Nebraska
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RapidRobert Offline
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Everything Supercuda said; turn the dampener till the marks are at 15 BTDC. turn the housing till the magnet is dead even with the tooth and the rotor is under the #1 or #6 plug wire cap terminal (depends on if you are on #1 or #6 compression). pull/check the plugs (they might just be fouled from all this). See if it will start/run with the Holley. If not then clamp the PCV hose & retry. if no go then put the old carb back on & then see if it will run. If no run right then something got bumped/altered cuz it ran with the AFB before. If it runs good then try swapping back to the Holley carb again. Keep us posted. EDIT missed that you had the P ign, get its trigger lined up to fire just like the OE electronic ign.

Last edited by RapidRobert; 01/11/16 12:44 AM.

live every 24 hour block of time like it's your last day on earth
Re: wornn out big block timing question [Re: RMCHRGR] #1988170
01/11/16 01:50 AM
01/11/16 01:50 AM
Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 11,543
chicagoland,usa
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buildanother Offline
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Sounds to me as well, that the carb has possibly a mismatched base gasket-manifold issue. If it ran decent before you pulled the old carter off, then the distrib may not be the culprit. Over advancing ign timing can mask some lean issues.

Re: wornn out big block timing question [Re: RMCHRGR] #1988174
01/11/16 01:53 AM
01/11/16 01:53 AM
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 1,890
Spahn Ranch
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Thanks for the replies. We did get it running OK eventually for him to drive it back to his place, about 30 miles and he said it ran as well as it ever did but just got really hot from all the advance. It just took hours of fiddling. Couple answers to some questions below.

I know this will sound stupid but I have two perfectly good, working timing lights, one normal and one dial back plus one of the old Snap On advance meters. In doing all this fiddling to get it to run right, we tried the timing 17 ways to Sunday; retarded, advanced, in the middle, no difference no matter where it was. It would crank fine but it was hard/no starting and popping out the carb. The popping made me think one of two things - it was lean or the noisy valve is really bad and the miss is affecting the overall low speed operation.

Before we got it running OK, it would pop out the carb and had no power under load. We kept driving around the block to see if what we did worked. At that point I made big swings with the timing just to see if there was an effect one way or another. The only way it would start easily and stay running was with the advance cranked way clockwise.

After a couple hours of this, we tried advancing it farther than I thought would be normal, thinking it would fire/run, then back it down a little to a normal level to see if it was OK. It started right up though and stayed running so we said OK, that's what it needs. We were just happy to get it to stay running and drive sort of normally. It was raining, he had to get back home, took way longer than anticipated. I meant to go back and check the timing, just didn't. I fully knew there was too much advance regardless of what the actual number is. Yes, it's half a$$ed. What can you do.

The old AFB had no PCV, it was from a '62 413. I did not think the PCV leaned it out but I guess it is more air into the mixture. Kind of a catch 22 there? Smokes out the breathers without it.

Throttle linkage is indeed the solid rod type that pushes forward. It needed adjusting because the AFB throttle lever put the end of the rod in a different spot than the Holley. Just a minor move was all it took to get it right but it was double checked with the lever on the trans to make sure the kickdown was correct.

I don't believe there is still a vacuum leak, unless it is somewhere other than where we checked which is entirely possible given the overall poor condition of the car. We checked it with carb cleaner all around the carb base to see if the rpm changed and it was good after we fixed it. The adapter is a PITA, would rather not have to use it.

There's nothing obvious (to me) that points to why it needs so much timing, just looking for clues beyond what we did. Again, I know we need to check the timing accurately but we know it is way too far advanced and will not run with less timing.



'71 Duster
'17 Ram 1500
Re: wornn out big block timing question [Re: RMCHRGR] #1988210
01/11/16 02:43 AM
01/11/16 02:43 AM
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Lincoln Nebraska
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RapidRobert Offline
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Put the light on it & see what you have. any possibility it jumped a tooth? You might check exact TDC. Holler how it turns out


live every 24 hour block of time like it's your last day on earth
Re: wornn out big block timing question [Re: RMCHRGR] #1988228
01/11/16 03:12 AM
01/11/16 03:12 AM
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Northeastern PA
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Fanning Offline
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X2 on the cam timing jumping a tooth. I would look there first.

Re: wornn out big block timing question [Re: RMCHRGR] #1988229
01/11/16 03:13 AM
01/11/16 03:13 AM
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northwest USA
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NANKET Offline
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Maybe with all the popping and such with the Holley it did jump a tooth. That could explain explain the need for so much timing, and running hot and no power with retarded cam timing.

Re: wornn out big block timing question [Re: RMCHRGR] #1988359
01/11/16 12:29 PM
01/11/16 12:29 PM
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Spahn Ranch
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I appreciate the suggestions on the timing chain and it makes sense but there is no way I am getting involved in that job with this P.O.S. death trap. I have actually advised my friend several times not to keep sinking money into it but he has some sort of strange attachment to it. (like me and my truck but that's a different story) I get into these exercises for my own fun and to hang out with him but I hate to say I'm not fully engaged in it like with my own projects.

Maybe there is something to the chain being off in this situation though. When I was a tech, I remember doing a timing belt one time and ended up off a tooth. On the road test it was real sluggish like described above, foot to the floor, no power. Brought it back in, re-installed the belt in the correct spot and it was back to normal. Didn't make time on that one but learned a good lesson.

Again though, I'm not digging into it here to figure it out.


'71 Duster
'17 Ram 1500
Re: wornn out big block timing question [Re: RMCHRGR] #1988430
01/11/16 02:23 PM
01/11/16 02:23 PM
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Posts: 36,040
Lincoln Nebraska
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RapidRobert Offline
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What about having HIM! do some quick checks in that regard? He could (carefully/slowly) hand turn/bump the crank (CW) with a 1&1/4 socket/breaker bar till the reluctor wheel is dead centered for the dist to fire on either #1 or #6 cyl and see where the marks are at on the dampener. On a SB one tooth off is a 15.6 deg difference (23/46 teeth on SB crank/cam sprocket(s), 360 div by 23 = 15.6). not sure on a BB (BB newbie here)


live every 24 hour block of time like it's your last day on earth
Re: wornn out big block timing question [Re: RMCHRGR] #1988497
01/11/16 03:29 PM
01/11/16 03:29 PM
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Posts: 9,436
Blair County,PA
62maxwgn Offline
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It may be an old car but it didn't jump timing when it got to your house!If you just installed the Pertronix module,you are off on timing to begin with,the Pertronix can re phase the timing as much as 5/10 degrees before or after TDC.

Re: wornn out big block timing question [Re: RapidRobert] #1988516
01/11/16 03:43 PM
01/11/16 03:43 PM
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Posts: 1,890
Spahn Ranch
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Originally Posted By RapidRobert
What about having HIM! do some quick checks in that regard?


HIM! is a total rookie who can barely boil water. I always (regrettably) offer 'help' which invariably turns into an adventure with this car.

It's all in good fun though. I've learned a lot about the older stuff, it's cool.

We are planning to reconvene in a week or two to further the tuning process.


'71 Duster
'17 Ram 1500
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