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Hello Hap,
I would be very wary of the accuracy with any engine that has an inclined spark plug port. I don't believe that you will get a consistent 'stop point' with such a device. As you say a couple of crank degrees is a few degrees of cam inaccuracy.
Alec
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Hi Alec,
Hap is saying that using a positive stop in a plug hole, while bringing the piston up to the stop from both directions of rotation, will give two degree wheel readings that are split equally on each side of TDC. Splitting the two readings equally will give a very accurate indication of actual TDC.
For this purpose, it makes no difference whether the plug hole/stop is angled. The stop is still the same distance from the cylinder head. The whole purpose is to eliminate the rather indefinite indications of actual TDC caused by the several degrees of piston dwell at TDC. To my knowledge, all precision engine tuners use the positive stop method to determine TDC in order to check cam timing. Most times the cylinder head would not be installed & a bridged stop on top of the cylinder would be used. If necessary, for some reason, a positive stop in a plug hole will accomplish the same thing.
For the purpose of precisely measuring ACTUAL piston distance from TDC, the inclined plug measurment would indeed introduce an error. For example, an inclination of 30 degrees would result in the "measured" distance that the piston moves, being only 87% of the actual distance.
D