My old 65 dart was having issues with the dual point on a cruise last month after rebuilding the carb. Loss of power was apparent. Upon troubleshooting, vacuum advance was having issues.
Got a rebuilt replacement vacuum adv from @halifaxhops and proceeded to tune the points. The old advance actually had gassy oil in it O_o.
As I got the dwell set, one of the leads inside broke loose. Having repaired that lead a few times it was too short to fix again. So also got some new leads from Ray as well.
Got it all together and running, combined dwell was 36. But, as I had put the new leads in, the inside insulator block cracked in half. Still bolted in, but worried if I loosened the nut on the outside even a little, it would fall apart.
So I decided to make the jump and try out HEI again, with one of the new replacements available. I had tried the do it yourself version of the HEI conversion years ago with a module, mopar electronic dist and a coil, and it never performed better than the dual point.
Rotated the distributor/oil pump gear 90 to install it. Put a solid copper wire in a spare ballast in place of the resistive wire and installed it. Replaced the GR5 plugs that were running rich with some GR4IX's gapped at 0.050, and proceeded to tune in the new HEI distributor and coil.
I found out tuning it, that the advance range was way too wide to get the engine to run right. Setting timing to get the total advance that I wanted would have been 4 ATDC. Backfire and flames in the newly rebuilt carb was the result at that setting when giving it gas, stumble and backfire through the carb. Putting it on the vacuum port instead of the dist port, it just stumbled, no flames...
Ended up disconnecting the vacuum advance on it and plugging the carb vacuum ports.
The old dart runs considerably better than the dual point ever had now. Timing at 8 BTDC with total advance at 36. Now that its dialed in, I'm pretty impressed with the result. Glad I did the swap.
Ready for the mopar club meeting this week.
Got a rebuilt replacement vacuum adv from @halifaxhops and proceeded to tune the points. The old advance actually had gassy oil in it O_o.
As I got the dwell set, one of the leads inside broke loose. Having repaired that lead a few times it was too short to fix again. So also got some new leads from Ray as well.
Got it all together and running, combined dwell was 36. But, as I had put the new leads in, the inside insulator block cracked in half. Still bolted in, but worried if I loosened the nut on the outside even a little, it would fall apart.
So I decided to make the jump and try out HEI again, with one of the new replacements available. I had tried the do it yourself version of the HEI conversion years ago with a module, mopar electronic dist and a coil, and it never performed better than the dual point.
Rotated the distributor/oil pump gear 90 to install it. Put a solid copper wire in a spare ballast in place of the resistive wire and installed it. Replaced the GR5 plugs that were running rich with some GR4IX's gapped at 0.050, and proceeded to tune in the new HEI distributor and coil.
I found out tuning it, that the advance range was way too wide to get the engine to run right. Setting timing to get the total advance that I wanted would have been 4 ATDC. Backfire and flames in the newly rebuilt carb was the result at that setting when giving it gas, stumble and backfire through the carb. Putting it on the vacuum port instead of the dist port, it just stumbled, no flames...
Ended up disconnecting the vacuum advance on it and plugging the carb vacuum ports.
The old dart runs considerably better than the dual point ever had now. Timing at 8 BTDC with total advance at 36. Now that its dialed in, I'm pretty impressed with the result. Glad I did the swap.
Ready for the mopar club meeting this week.
















