OK Guys, I'm posting this here rather than a Chevy forum, mainly because I'm a member here and like you guys.
OK, here is the scoop. I bought a barely running 1989 Chevy S10 Blazer w/4x4 about two months ago. I bought it because I live on a gravel road on a farm and the CB7s don't like 4ft of snow drifts. I drove the truck into the garage and pulled it apart to find out why it ran so poorly.
I found a good deal of problems and went to replacing parts. After replacing all of the parts and cleaning the intake manifold I went to install the new dizzy with new cap and rotor.
To set the initial timing I did the following:
1: disconnect the electronic timing advance wire in the passenger floor pan
2: Set motor to the first timing mark on the harmonic balancer after "feeling" for TDC on compression stroke
3: mark distributor base for location of #1 cylinder point or post on cap
4: insert distributor and make sure the rotor lines up with the mark on the base
5: put the dizzy cap on and wire up all spark plugs
I do all of this and she won't start, when I connect my timing light to #1 spark plug and try to crank it I can't even see a timing mark in the timing light flashes...
I'm confused on how I'm getting so far off when it seems like I am doing the procedure correctly. I'm wondering if my harmonic balancer is indicating the correct TDC location.
I'm considering making a TDC finding tool out of an old spark plug and finding it with the manual method.
Before I do that can one of you please tell me I'm a dummy. I didn't mess with the timing chain or cam gear so those two should be in time since it ran when I drove it in.
I know I have fuel and spark and compression, I also know I don't have them all at the same time, so please skip the "do you got fuel or spark" routine. I have also tried to put the dizzy on 180* and still same result.
OK, here is the scoop. I bought a barely running 1989 Chevy S10 Blazer w/4x4 about two months ago. I bought it because I live on a gravel road on a farm and the CB7s don't like 4ft of snow drifts. I drove the truck into the garage and pulled it apart to find out why it ran so poorly.
I found a good deal of problems and went to replacing parts. After replacing all of the parts and cleaning the intake manifold I went to install the new dizzy with new cap and rotor.
To set the initial timing I did the following:
1: disconnect the electronic timing advance wire in the passenger floor pan
2: Set motor to the first timing mark on the harmonic balancer after "feeling" for TDC on compression stroke
3: mark distributor base for location of #1 cylinder point or post on cap
4: insert distributor and make sure the rotor lines up with the mark on the base
5: put the dizzy cap on and wire up all spark plugs
I do all of this and she won't start, when I connect my timing light to #1 spark plug and try to crank it I can't even see a timing mark in the timing light flashes...
I'm confused on how I'm getting so far off when it seems like I am doing the procedure correctly. I'm wondering if my harmonic balancer is indicating the correct TDC location.
I'm considering making a TDC finding tool out of an old spark plug and finding it with the manual method.
Before I do that can one of you please tell me I'm a dummy. I didn't mess with the timing chain or cam gear so those two should be in time since it ran when I drove it in.
I know I have fuel and spark and compression, I also know I don't have them all at the same time, so please skip the "do you got fuel or spark" routine. I have also tried to put the dizzy on 180* and still same result.
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