Gents, we are getting very close.
Swapped out the points and condenser this morning. I tried doing this with the distributor in, but very difficult to get in there. The condenser screw was totally blind, so I decided to pull the distributor. I thought I had noted where the cap was, so putting it back in would be easy. I got in the points and condenser and reinstalled the distributor then started the truck. I got the dwell meter hooked up and set the dwell to 30, then grabbed my timing light. I was shocked when I pointed the light at the HB and saw nothing. Doh! Surprised it had been idling so well. I thought about taking the distributor back out, rotating 180 degrees and dropping it back in, but I decided to find TDC and make sure I got it in correctly. I set the advance to 0 BTDC then checked that the dwell was at 30.
I hooked up the vacuum gauge, and it held steady at 16" Hg. I'm not sure what normal is for this engine, but this seemed a touch low. I blipped the throttle and the needle dropped, but I didn't note whether it dropped to 0. In looking at the graphic, I can't say whether the vacuum is low enough to have a ring issue. I had added a bottle of Marvel Mystery Oil to the oil, which probably reduced the viscosity a touch. Also given how little the engine has been run since I got it, and how little over the previous 30 years, the valves and rings may still have some buildup or stickiness. I wanted to check the compression, but my wife reminded me we had a holiday party to go to, and I still needed to run a few errands. I decided to put on the air cleaner and canister and take the truck for my errands.
I drove three miles and pushed and held the RPMs fairly high once the engine was warmed up. I also shifted a bit early a few times to load up the engine a bit. No misses and no backfires. I made a few more stops then drove the three miles back home. The truck ran great until I made the final climb up to the house. On the steepest part of the climb, I got one small backfire from the engine when pushing it up the hill with high RPMs.
This was the best the truck has run. Previously, I would get a few misses even on level roads, and the truck did not like shifts at lower RPMs. I still haven't spritzed w/salt water however, given I have replaced almost all the ignition components but the coil, I am thinking the ignition is pretty good now.
Thinking about things, that seems to leave the carburetor. When I was a teen living at home my motorcycle and snowmobile were very sensitive to elevation changes. I don't know how sensitive these old Rochester carburetors are. My Dad was living at an elevation over 5000' and often drove the truck in the mountains at around 8 to 9K feet. I wonder if he would have jetted the carb for a high elevation. I am now driving the truck below 3K feet. If my Dad had leaned the mixture for the higher elevation, it could be a bit starved for fuel here. What do you think?
I'll check the compression next week and will check the vacuum again after the engine has a few more tanks of gas through it.
Guys, I admit I have been having fun tinkering with this ol' engine. Progress has been slow, but progress nonetheless. I do get frustrated that I seem to spend more time researching and watching YouTube than wrenching, but I am learning a ton. Thanks again for the patience and handholding!
Ken