Lustle
Well-Known Member
Hey Folks,
I'm new to the forums. And to owning a Mopar A body. I have a 1972 Scamp! With a decent 340/727/8-3/4 in it. Bought it with a bunch of work already done to it... 12/14 years ago. And then it was left to sit. It was basically completely gone through, lug nuts, bushings, torsion bars, ball joints, etc. Transmission and rear end work. Engine work. Guy rebuilt it for his kid, and the kid just let it sit. 5000k on the body. 1000k on the engine when I bought it. I've put about 1000k on it myself.
But with the sitting comes problems. Right now it has a misfire. I've tried searching the forums but haven't come across anything quite like mine. It's had it since I got it. But it wasn't bad. Mainly at idle. More noticeable in gear at stoplights and the like. Barely noticeable, more like a rough idle/big cam than a misfire. Not as noticeable in park, but curb idle was set high. It was running rich, more than likely to help with the misfire. A little hesitation and stumbling on off idle/low rpm acceleration, figured the carb needed tuning. At higher RPMs or once under way with heavy throttle, she gives her. No misses that I can tell. Pulls hard. So the misfire only seems to be at low rpm/idle/in gear.
I'll give you the basics of the engine build.
340
.040 over
Keith Black 243 pistons
Comp 274H cam 260/268 at 0.05
Iron heads, worked, 2.02 and 1.60 valves
Edelbrcok RPM Air gap
Holley Street Avenger 670
Stock distributor
Stock ignition box
Combo should be good for 10:1 static, 7.5 dynamic compression.
So to fix it I started going through the ignition. Working from the plugs back. New plugs. Old ones are dry black, definitely rich. I put new ones in cause I want to colour them myself. See what I get. New wires. New MSD coil, thinking maybe the old coil sat and was giving off weak voltage. But with the new coil. The misfire got much rougher. Almost stalling/dying at stop lights. Which seemed odd to me. It should be a better spark. But somehow the old coil was hiding the misfire? I haven't tried hooking up the old coil to see if it helps yet. Firing order is good. Pull dist cap, cleaned up rotor/points. Same problem. Tried tuning the carb, thinking maybe the rich was the problem. The metering needles were out over 3 turns! Crazy high. I got them back to 1.5 turns. Started tuning appropriately. 1/8 turns. Adjusting curb idle as needed. But now I can't get it into gear without it stalling. The misfire just lets it stall out. I'm sure I could get it into gear, if I turn up the curb idle and pull the metering needles way out again. The more I lean it out, the worse the misfire gets.
So at this point I'm forgetting the rich. And just looking to target the misfire. Why would it be worse with a new coil? Timing? I'm thinking the usual going through the ignition. Doing dist cap and rotor next. Then box, etc. And keep working. I'm going to test for vacuum leak whenever the rain stops. And a compression test maybe if I can't figure it out. But I'm also hoping that maybe some of you guys have come across this.
Any help is appreciated!
I'm new to the forums. And to owning a Mopar A body. I have a 1972 Scamp! With a decent 340/727/8-3/4 in it. Bought it with a bunch of work already done to it... 12/14 years ago. And then it was left to sit. It was basically completely gone through, lug nuts, bushings, torsion bars, ball joints, etc. Transmission and rear end work. Engine work. Guy rebuilt it for his kid, and the kid just let it sit. 5000k on the body. 1000k on the engine when I bought it. I've put about 1000k on it myself.
But with the sitting comes problems. Right now it has a misfire. I've tried searching the forums but haven't come across anything quite like mine. It's had it since I got it. But it wasn't bad. Mainly at idle. More noticeable in gear at stoplights and the like. Barely noticeable, more like a rough idle/big cam than a misfire. Not as noticeable in park, but curb idle was set high. It was running rich, more than likely to help with the misfire. A little hesitation and stumbling on off idle/low rpm acceleration, figured the carb needed tuning. At higher RPMs or once under way with heavy throttle, she gives her. No misses that I can tell. Pulls hard. So the misfire only seems to be at low rpm/idle/in gear.
I'll give you the basics of the engine build.
340
.040 over
Keith Black 243 pistons
Comp 274H cam 260/268 at 0.05
Iron heads, worked, 2.02 and 1.60 valves
Edelbrcok RPM Air gap
Holley Street Avenger 670
Stock distributor
Stock ignition box
Combo should be good for 10:1 static, 7.5 dynamic compression.
So to fix it I started going through the ignition. Working from the plugs back. New plugs. Old ones are dry black, definitely rich. I put new ones in cause I want to colour them myself. See what I get. New wires. New MSD coil, thinking maybe the old coil sat and was giving off weak voltage. But with the new coil. The misfire got much rougher. Almost stalling/dying at stop lights. Which seemed odd to me. It should be a better spark. But somehow the old coil was hiding the misfire? I haven't tried hooking up the old coil to see if it helps yet. Firing order is good. Pull dist cap, cleaned up rotor/points. Same problem. Tried tuning the carb, thinking maybe the rich was the problem. The metering needles were out over 3 turns! Crazy high. I got them back to 1.5 turns. Started tuning appropriately. 1/8 turns. Adjusting curb idle as needed. But now I can't get it into gear without it stalling. The misfire just lets it stall out. I'm sure I could get it into gear, if I turn up the curb idle and pull the metering needles way out again. The more I lean it out, the worse the misfire gets.
So at this point I'm forgetting the rich. And just looking to target the misfire. Why would it be worse with a new coil? Timing? I'm thinking the usual going through the ignition. Doing dist cap and rotor next. Then box, etc. And keep working. I'm going to test for vacuum leak whenever the rain stops. And a compression test maybe if I can't figure it out. But I'm also hoping that maybe some of you guys have come across this.
Any help is appreciated!















