Coolant fine. .000 ohm from spark boot to inside cap contact.Have you run an ohm meter from the #1spark boot through to the contact in the distributor cap?
Just another wild check...is your coolant level steady? No chance the head gasket is leaking around the #1?
Spark plug still comes out wet, I believe with gas.Coolant fine. .000 ohm from spark boot to inside cap contact.
Solid copper strand. Approx 5 inches plug to cap..000 sounds very low. I may have missed, are you running solid wire high tension leads?
I'll take another look, but the front carb is primary for both #1 and #2 cylinders.Wet plugs can be bad rings, too much fuel, or a fouled plug. Since it sounds like you have replaced the plug several times, I am still leaning towards a fuel issue.
When you pull the front air cleaner and look at the jet, is the fuel level just below the top of the jet? If too high it will run down the intake, which could send it right into the #1 intake and foul the plug.
darn , that's deep ! I like it.Well, at least you found something to give you hope!?!
Here is some conjecture, just for discussion (and I could be completely wrong). The firing order is 1-3-4-2. That means there is a long pause after #1 fires, while both intake pulses are in the rear carb and pulsing through the crossover tube. If you have any fuel accumulating in the front carb runners, it would tend to be blown forward by the crossover tube, and into the #1 runner. Then #2 fires, but it won't suck liquid fuel back up from the #1 runner that has accumulated. Finally, #1 fires again, but all that liquid fuel is drawn into that cylinder, not atomized, and quickly fouls the #1 plug.
Checked multiple times due to changing cap, wires, etc. All wires marked.Have you got the firing order correct ??