RickB
Yoda
Offline
It's been a long, long time since I have looked at timing on any car.
I've decided that may be what's needed on my '70 BGT as it has some symptoms of the timing not being "right".
It could also be the valves need adjustment, but I'd rather check timing first.
This has a stock 1800 that was rebuilt, de-smogged, and seems pretty strong after a "wake up" from a 15 year nap in the PO's garage.
I'm pretty happy with the power I get out of the motor, but the valve train produces a bit of racket (not real bad, but audible) and the fuel economy is less than what I want after a full tune up.
When I look at the timing, where should it be? What's the 'sweet spot' generally on these motors?
Other thoughts about increasing economy while retaining power?
I've decided that may be what's needed on my '70 BGT as it has some symptoms of the timing not being "right".
It could also be the valves need adjustment, but I'd rather check timing first.
This has a stock 1800 that was rebuilt, de-smogged, and seems pretty strong after a "wake up" from a 15 year nap in the PO's garage.
I'm pretty happy with the power I get out of the motor, but the valve train produces a bit of racket (not real bad, but audible) and the fuel economy is less than what I want after a full tune up.
When I look at the timing, where should it be? What's the 'sweet spot' generally on these motors?
Other thoughts about increasing economy while retaining power?