Bruce Wingate
Full Access Member
- Joined
- May 20, 2021
- Posts
- 154
- Reaction score
- 89
- Location
- Long Island
- First Name
- Bruce
- Truck Year
- 1984
- Truck Model
- K10
- Engine Size
- 350
It has been cold enough here to keep me from wanting to work on the truck for a bit, but I did install a fuel pressure regulator and set it to ~5.5 psi. Doesn't seem to have helped much, but I haven't done an actual check. The truck is running cleaner and the exhaust smells better though. I think the "running rich" part is fixed and now I'm trying to get it to run "right" or "reliable."
I don't like what my mechanic said that the timing was way off and what he did seemed to make it worse. It is harder to start and will not stay idling for the first few minutes without playing with the throttle. It occasionally will start, run for a second or two and die. I also notice a slight stumble at idle - just a quick break in the idle rhythm. He said it was timed at 4 degrees. Based on what everyone else is saying, I think this should be in the 8 to 12 range. (Engine has no smog/pollution controls on it.)
My next step will be to change the plugs and fuss with the timing to get it to what I think is right. I am going to try to find TDC of the engine and see how far off the mark on the harmonic balancer actually is and then try to time it to 10 degrees.
I understand finding the compression stroke by placing a finger over the spark plug hole, but after the compression starts, how do you know then the piston is at TDC? I'm not really keen on putting the stop tool in and using that, but I'm thinking that might be my only way if the timing mark is way off.
Also, does adjusting the vacuum advance in the distributor have any effect on this?
After that will be trying to track down a possible vacuum leak.
I don't like what my mechanic said that the timing was way off and what he did seemed to make it worse. It is harder to start and will not stay idling for the first few minutes without playing with the throttle. It occasionally will start, run for a second or two and die. I also notice a slight stumble at idle - just a quick break in the idle rhythm. He said it was timed at 4 degrees. Based on what everyone else is saying, I think this should be in the 8 to 12 range. (Engine has no smog/pollution controls on it.)
My next step will be to change the plugs and fuss with the timing to get it to what I think is right. I am going to try to find TDC of the engine and see how far off the mark on the harmonic balancer actually is and then try to time it to 10 degrees.
I understand finding the compression stroke by placing a finger over the spark plug hole, but after the compression starts, how do you know then the piston is at TDC? I'm not really keen on putting the stop tool in and using that, but I'm thinking that might be my only way if the timing mark is way off.
Also, does adjusting the vacuum advance in the distributor have any effect on this?
After that will be trying to track down a possible vacuum leak.