I am trying to get my 1959 TR3A back on the road where it belongs and I need some advice. It idles very well at 800 rpm. I could leave it there all day idling. I can rev it up sitting in the garage without a load on it but I can also make it backfire badly through both the exhaust and the carb by punching the gas while sitting there. This is after it has warmed up. Which leads me to my first question. I just put a recored radiator in and an 8 blade fan. The temperature gauge used to go up to its 6 o'clock position and stay there once it warmed up. Now it only goes to the mark between the 90 and 185 mark. Which I estimate to be about 132 degrees if the mark actually corresponds to half way between the two marks on either side. I am pretty confident that the temp gauge is working correctly mostly because it used to go right to the 185/6 o'clock mark and stay there. 50 degrees cooler is a big difference I would think and I am wondering if the engine is just not warming up though that is kind of hard to imagine after running it for half an hour.
Another puzzling sign to me is that it does not appear that my vacuum advance is working. Using a timing gun I see little if any difference between having the vacuum pipe attached to the distributor versus not attached. My experience has been that the mark on the crank pulley dances
around much more with the vacuum connected. As far as I can
tell it looks exactly the same. Another very obvious symptom is that every cylinder is running very, very rich. Both times I looked at the plugs they were caked with soot which cleaned of easily but proved pointless as as soon as I replaced them they would cake right up again.
It ran as well as a 47 year old car can run before I took it off the road to recore the radiator, replace the motor mounts and the fan...change all the fluids etc.
I am wondering if what I have described could be symptoms of
the vacuum advance not working either because of the weights in the distributor not doing their thing or the vacuum line being plugged up. That is an awfully small opening on the distributor side of the vacuum pipe. It is definitely connected well to the manifold. I have checked and made sure that the carb dampers are filled. I had great hopes that they were just low and it was leaning way out on acceleration. The plugs tell a different story than that.
One last distinct symptom is that when I gathered the courage to go up and down my street, after idling and experimenting with the timing, it bogged really bad under the slightest load. Is it possible that all this could be attributed to a vacuum advance not working?
All thoughts and ideas, catcalls and strongly worded diatribes most welcome.
Thanks very much,
Jim Lee
Another puzzling sign to me is that it does not appear that my vacuum advance is working. Using a timing gun I see little if any difference between having the vacuum pipe attached to the distributor versus not attached. My experience has been that the mark on the crank pulley dances
around much more with the vacuum connected. As far as I can
tell it looks exactly the same. Another very obvious symptom is that every cylinder is running very, very rich. Both times I looked at the plugs they were caked with soot which cleaned of easily but proved pointless as as soon as I replaced them they would cake right up again.
It ran as well as a 47 year old car can run before I took it off the road to recore the radiator, replace the motor mounts and the fan...change all the fluids etc.
I am wondering if what I have described could be symptoms of
the vacuum advance not working either because of the weights in the distributor not doing their thing or the vacuum line being plugged up. That is an awfully small opening on the distributor side of the vacuum pipe. It is definitely connected well to the manifold. I have checked and made sure that the carb dampers are filled. I had great hopes that they were just low and it was leaning way out on acceleration. The plugs tell a different story than that.
One last distinct symptom is that when I gathered the courage to go up and down my street, after idling and experimenting with the timing, it bogged really bad under the slightest load. Is it possible that all this could be attributed to a vacuum advance not working?
All thoughts and ideas, catcalls and strongly worded diatribes most welcome.
Thanks very much,
Jim Lee