Jim.ME
Well-known Member
- Location
- central ME
I see 1-2-3-4 counterclockwise or 1-4-3-2 clockwise. Here is a closer look.Yes sure. The wires are on clockwise. That’s the problem.
I see 1-2-3-4 counterclockwise or 1-4-3-2 clockwise. Here is a closer look.Yes sure. The wires are on clockwise. That’s the problem.
yes jim your right , sure hard to see on a phone, looked on laptop , but regardless both ways are wrong now LOL!! would get a big backfire this way.
It turns counterclockwise.
Are you sure about how they are plugged in?
I was doing what I would do on a v8 instead of just 1234 .i was following the firing order on the block ... Thank you .Yes sure. The wires are on clockwise. That’s the problem.
He asked in his first post if the firing order was 1-3-4-2 and counterclockwise rotation and I replied in the affirmative in post #2. So I figured he had it assembled that way.and we both asked about firing order,... but no confirmation on that, and i find it odd the correct stuff is always last for o p's to check.
. and the tales keep pouring in.
These wires have metal wires you can see under the part that clips on the plug .this is the way it came to me .not the way my own have . It’s a neighbors . Thank you for the help .He has 3 cyl wire looped under the coil wire. Instead of nicely in order. But it’s wrong anyhow. Another reason I make all my wires. They are all cut to length and neat. Not this one set fits all deal.
I understand that now thank you@Mfrench you posted:
"I was doing what I would do on a v8 instead of just 1234 .i was following the firing order on the block ... Thank you ."
I do not see that you followed the firing order that is on the block. The picture you posted in your post (#14) shows the plug wires in the distributor cap arranged as 1-2-3-4, when I followed each wire back to the plug it hooked to. In your picture they are not in the firing order of 1-3-4-2. I can only go on what I see in your picture.
View attachment 138391
If it doesn't start, we will have to confirm you have #1 actually on the compression stroke and the rotor pointed at the correct post in the distributor cap when it is.I understand that now thank you
and i would like to see that also. i have never seen wire core wires as fat as carbon core wires. seeing is believing.These wires have metal wires you can see under the part that clips on the plug .this is the way it came to me .not the way my own have . It’s a neighbors . Thank you for the help .
and i would like to see that also. i have never seen wire core wires as fat as carbon core wires. seeing is believing.
that was the standard thing back then . and less resistance for the spark on them 6 volt systems. plus you would hear the firing on your radio in the house. later on carbon came out in the 60's and help prevent that . it takes more ooph for the spark to jump a carbon core. many times a condenser was placed on the coil to help with that wire static. then with electronic ignition the wires were fatter also.I have a related question. Why do these old tractors need to use steel core wires
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