OK, so I have new timing chain and gears in hand. Newb, rookie, know nothing in me was going align dot to dot, and leave it there, thinking that would correspond to TDC on cylinder #1. I've watched several videos and nobody ever goes past dot to dot to correlate that with what all else has to be aligned to match. (That is a blatant hint to you youtuber video guys to get busy and make a video to explain it)
So then to straighten this out to be correct, I am hearing.........
1. Align dot to dot.......which correlates to TDC exhaust stroke.
2. Rotate cam shaft dot 180 degrees.....straight up......which then correlates to TDC ignition stroke ( I would know that if I have the #1 plug out and monitoring cylinder movement..........and distributor cap off and rotor is pointing to #1 cylinder.
3. Swap plug wires #1 to #1, #8 to #8, and so on.
Then if I have my heart set on being able to set timing, once it's back together enough, need to once again get #1 cylinder and distributor rotor back to TDC, then make a makeshift timing mark of some kind on my big pulley to correspond to timing marks on timing cover.
If I'm understanding right, if I was to put a timing light on #1 wire now, light would fire 180 degrees out of phase. When the mark, if I had one, was on opposite side. To get it to fire for correct timing now, I'd have to use light on the wire running to #6 cylinder?
So then to straighten this out to be correct, I am hearing.........
1. Align dot to dot.......which correlates to TDC exhaust stroke.
2. Rotate cam shaft dot 180 degrees.....straight up......which then correlates to TDC ignition stroke ( I would know that if I have the #1 plug out and monitoring cylinder movement..........and distributor cap off and rotor is pointing to #1 cylinder.
3. Swap plug wires #1 to #1, #8 to #8, and so on.
Then if I have my heart set on being able to set timing, once it's back together enough, need to once again get #1 cylinder and distributor rotor back to TDC, then make a makeshift timing mark of some kind on my big pulley to correspond to timing marks on timing cover.
If I'm understanding right, if I was to put a timing light on #1 wire now, light would fire 180 degrees out of phase. When the mark, if I had one, was on opposite side. To get it to fire for correct timing now, I'd have to use light on the wire running to #6 cylinder?















