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#1
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Bouncing timing/rpm at idle
Here’s a weird one…
I’m seeing my timing bounce 8-12 degrees retarded and back to the specified timing at idle with a dial back light. The RPMs on the timing light tach randomly toggles between 800 and 1400 - but the engine itself is not changing RPM. Idle is steady and smooth as is vacuum. It sounds healthy and runs great. The timing is steady once I put some RPMs into it. My first thought was timing chain slop. It’s a new Rollmaster with under a thousand miles on it. I just put the engine back together a couple weeks ago and there wasn’t any slop that concerned me. The fact that the engine sounds and idles smooth while the timing light is freaking out makes me think it’s something else. I tried 4 different timing lights all with the same results. I was seeing the timing bounce with all of them and RPMs toggle whether the light was on plug 1 or plug 3. Distributor was recently reworked by SunTuned so I know it's set up right. New BOP distributor gear that doesn’t show any abnormal wear. Checked for vacuum leaks and didn’t find any. I’m wondering if this could be an ignition system issue. Rotor and cap are new. Pertronix Ignitor and coil are also new, but we know they don’t have the best reputation. Taylor plug wires are also new. I have an extra Pertronix I may try swapping in first. Any other ideas? The car runs strong otherwise!
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Ken '68 GTO - 464 - Ram Air II heads - 236/242 roller - 9.5” TSP converter - Moser 3.55 Truetrac (build thread | walk around) '95 Comp T/A #6 M6 - bone stock (pics) Last edited by Verdoro 68; 08-02-2023 at 03:01 PM. |
#2
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What's the cam endplay? These things will typically still run pretty good even with a good amount of cam endplay, but the wider that is, the more movement (especially if it's a roller with non tapered lobes) you'll see. As the cam moves back and forth, the mesh of the distributor gear to the cam gear changes and will effect timing as it does so.
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-Jason 1969 Pontiac Firebird |
#3
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As much as I hate to admit it, that sounds like a Petronix glitch. I personally haven't had any issues with them, but many, many people on this forum have had multiple failures. Petronix is a Chinese, electronic product, so that is the first place I would go. If you just had jumping timing, I would look at weak dist springs, loose rotor tab, something like that. But the RPM indicated change indicates a signal problem to or out of the module.
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#4
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Cam end play is .002 which is a little on the tight side. If I turn the engine by hand I there doesn't appear to be any lag in the distributor rotation either forward or backwards so that makes me think the timing chain is ok.
My hunch about the ignition system appears to have some legs. I swapped out the Pertronix module, cap and rotor but the issue persisted. Then I tried another old Taylor Spiro pro wire I had laying around on the #1 cylinder. The issue persisted. Out of curiosity, I swapped in a date coded reproduction 'Lectric Limited plug wire for #1 and the timing normalized! Here's what I was seeing with the Taylor wire: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/rwXpzN0E-yk And here's what it looks like with the Lectric Limited: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GyTZmqnqeMk I wonder what it is about the Taylor wires that could be causing this?
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Ken '68 GTO - 464 - Ram Air II heads - 236/242 roller - 9.5” TSP converter - Moser 3.55 Truetrac (build thread | walk around) '95 Comp T/A #6 M6 - bone stock (pics) |
#5
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Is the voltage output of your Alt steady below 2000 rpm?
Judge this by a hand held meter, not one you may have in the cars dash.
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Wernher Von Braun warned before his retirement from NASA back in 1972, that the next world war would be against the ETs! And he was not talking about 1/8 or 1/4 mile ETs! 1) 1940s 100% silver 4 cup tea server set. Two dry rotted 14 x 10 Micky Thompson slicks. 1) un-mailed in gift coupon from a 1972 box of corn flakes. Two pairs of brown leather flip flops, never seen more then 2 mph. Education is what your left with once you forget things! |
#6
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Great question - I haven't checked the alternator!
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Ken '68 GTO - 464 - Ram Air II heads - 236/242 roller - 9.5” TSP converter - Moser 3.55 Truetrac (build thread | walk around) '95 Comp T/A #6 M6 - bone stock (pics) |
#7
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So swapping out the Taylor #1 ignition wire solved the problem? If so, I wonder if that wire was causing an issue with your timing light?
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"If the best Mustang is the Camaro, the best Camaro is actually the Firebird" David Zenlea |
#8
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I was recently adjusting my timing and noticed it would jump all over the place if the distributor hold down wasn't tight. I had it snug, just loose enough that I could nudge it by hand but by no means "loose". I was very surprised that the difference between snug and tight made that much of a difference in timing stability. I guess it also could have been the distributor loosing a proper ground through he hold down clamp.
Nevermind .... I see you found the issue. Is the Spirowire an EMF shielding wire? A spiral winding might play heck with an inductive clamp.
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I'm World's Best Hyperbolist !! Last edited by dataway; 08-02-2023 at 07:49 PM. |
#9
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Make sure you have 12Volts + to the ignition coil. Pertronix will not run correctly through a ballast resistor or the factory resistance wire in a points car. Glad you have it figured out.
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#10
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I think it's the Taylor wires in general. I did a direct comparison on multiple wires and the timing is steady with the Lectric wires and bounces with the Taylors which is weird because lots of folks use Taylor without issue (me included). Quote:
The alternator is putting out a very healthy 15.27v at the rear post. The positive wire going into the coil reads a little over 14.2v. Measuring across the coil's posts with the car on, but not running, reads 11.23v With the car running at idle the coil reads 6.80v. It drops to 5v when I rev the car. Since the voltage going into the coil isn't the same as going out, it seems like the coil might be the problem?
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Ken '68 GTO - 464 - Ram Air II heads - 236/242 roller - 9.5” TSP converter - Moser 3.55 Truetrac (build thread | walk around) '95 Comp T/A #6 M6 - bone stock (pics) Last edited by Verdoro 68; 08-02-2023 at 10:57 PM. |
The Following User Says Thank You to Verdoro 68 For This Useful Post: | ||
#11
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I recently rebuild my 455 and had the worst time getting it to idle and the timing to not jump from 12 to 15 to 18 and back to 12( a very long post here with many members opining on just what the problem was). I chased down every suggestion and, after removing the MSD dizzy, coil and 6AL control box and replacing with a Davis HEI, timing is now rock solid.
That worked for me, your results may vary. |
The Following User Says Thank You to West Coast GTO For This Useful Post: | ||
#12
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hey, i'm no expert but the video of your timing jumping around at idle, I honestly didn't see anything bad there. I noticed your RPM were 50-150 rpm lower than second video. It's my understanding that a healthy camshaft at idle can cause a bit of that movement you see. Obviously seasoned vet's here could say if I am wrong. I've learned that if you have "timing IDLE CREEP" that your springs in distributor are too weak and as such are swinging out at IDLE causing erratic timing. I've just never witnessed it. Your distributor was gone through and extremely unlikely that springs are weak.
I'm wondering if the taylor made was made with EMF shield core and the other set was not? I mean you would think you'd have to ask for special order spark plug wires that do not have that EMF protection? Maybe with EFI now you have to ? I've ran 3 different distributors, hei, points etc and my idle timing has always been a bit jumpy. A way to look at it is, your total timing is lets say 36 at 3000 rpm , and you know your distributor mechanical is 18 degrees. 36-18 mechanical is = 18 initial. the guy who sold you distributor may of included that info. so as you rev engine up slowly from 830 rpm watch timing and it should jump up around 1000 rpm or so...that is when mechanical starts. hope this all helps.
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69 Gto, 390 posi gears,th400 w/jim hand converter/406 pontiac/#64 HEADS/ 10:1 compression/ 190 PSI with/ TRW 160 thou domes / hooker headers 1 7/8, PRW 1.5 rockers, 405 Crower Springs, Holley 750 vac with proform upgrade, Performer RPM on points / 284 H Single Pattern Crane |
#13
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Rollmaster timing sets do that, but typically most of the "bounce" is at high RPM when you follow them on the dyno with a timing light.
It doesn't seem to effect power but a product of the design. Unlike the factory timing sets there is not constant tooth contact and while the chain is being pulled deep into the gears. I use the stock 3/4" wide Morse timing sets here and they run much smoother when you watch them with a timing light.....FWIW......
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If you can read this, thank a teacher. If you can read this in English, thank a Veteran! https://cliffshighperformance.com/ 73 Ventura, SOLD 455, 3740lbs, 11.30's at 120mph, 1977 Pontiac Q-jet, HO intake, HEI, 10" converter, 3.42 gears, DOT's, 7.20's at 96mph and still WAY under the roll bar rule. Best ET to date 7.18 at 97MPH (1/8th mile), |
#14
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I would use a single 30 A relay. Remove wire(s) from + on coil and use this to control the relay at post 86 on relay, post 85 to chassis ground, 30 to battery and 87 to + on coil. HTH |
#15
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Need to Know
Which Ignitor and what coil are you using?
Ignitors need battery volts. Coil volts depends on the coil being used. That's wheather or not it needs a resistance wire. Ignitor III is multi spark and can show up on a timing light as two flashes. First flash being initial timing and the second being the ratarded extra spark. Timing light picking up two sparks is what messes with the tach reading. Clay |
#16
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#17
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I fought this issue many years ago. I believe it was from the MSD. I switched to a self battery powered timing light and it solved it.
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LIFT HEAVY, LIFE IS TOO SHORT TO BE SMALL! |
#18
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"The flat link chains with the plastic cam sprocket is the smoothest of them all. May be some of the reason the OE's went that direction back in the day. Some Stock and Super Stock NHRA guys seek out these sets with the plastic sprocket for the rock steady timing. Obviously, we all know the durability issues on poorly maintained engines"
Correct, nothing out there faster than a 3/4" wide factory timing set with a nylon top gear. They'll run forever in a race engine but as wel know after 100,000 miles and not enough oil changes plus a couple of overheating sessions they start to flake off some teeth! I've never been comforable using them when they were available but love the factory type sets with the heat treated metal gears and would use the variety with the cast iron sprockets WAY before I'd put any type of "double roller" into one of these engines......FWIW....
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If you can read this, thank a teacher. If you can read this in English, thank a Veteran! https://cliffshighperformance.com/ 73 Ventura, SOLD 455, 3740lbs, 11.30's at 120mph, 1977 Pontiac Q-jet, HO intake, HEI, 10" converter, 3.42 gears, DOT's, 7.20's at 96mph and still WAY under the roll bar rule. Best ET to date 7.18 at 97MPH (1/8th mile), |
#19
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The Taylor wires aren't anything special. Just off the shelf cut to fit 8MM Spiro Pros.
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I'm pretty confident it's not the timing chain since a plug wire swap fixed the issue - or at least band aided it. Also, the RPMs were toggling intermittently at the timing light which wouldn't be a timing chain thing. This is pretty much the same ignition setup I've been running for years, it's just all new parts, so I'm not sure what the culprit is. Maybe something changed in the way the parts are manufactured that's causing the issue.
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Ken '68 GTO - 464 - Ram Air II heads - 236/242 roller - 9.5” TSP converter - Moser 3.55 Truetrac (build thread | walk around) '95 Comp T/A #6 M6 - bone stock (pics) |
#20
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Put an ohm meter on the 'bad' wire, and move the wire around. Bet you will see the conductor or cover is broken and is causing the issue.
Bad wire or arcing it what this sounds like to me. The MSD super conductor 8.8 wires are my go-to, and I make my own lengths. It's hard to find a good wire these days. .
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. 1970 GTO Judge Tribute Pro-Tour Project 535 IA2 http://forums.maxperformanceinc.com/...d.php?t=760624 1971 Trans Am 463, 315cfm E-head Sniper XFlow EFI, TKO600 extreme, 9", GW suspension, Baer brakes, pro tour car https://forums.maxperformanceinc.com...ght=procharger Theme Song: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7zKAS...ature=youtu.be |
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