you can either rotate the dist to align the cylinder you want to fire or you can move the oil pump drive to where the dist lines up correctly , I do the latter , or you can move the wires on the cap to where the dist is now pointing
if the gears lined up at TDC & you have the cover on you can now move the crank to any position , no need to remove the cover again
, move the crank back to approx 20* advanced with both #! lifters down & install the dist with the reluctoir lined up with the pick up & put #1 wire wherre the rotor is pointed & it should fire right up ... with fuel
I didn't check if Cyl#1 piston was at TDC. According to earlier posts in this thread and the how-to Oldschool linked to, first it's to install the gears with the dots aligned, and then move to TDC?
What I did was to make absolutely sure the dots on the old gears were aligned before I removed them.
The new cam should then be directly replacing the old cams position in relation to the crank, and the only difference in the gear setups is the distributor gear that's a bit off now.
So with the crank in 0 degrees at the timing tab (It was almost dead on 0 degrees when I got the timing cover back on, while the gears were aligned. Gears should still be aligned now) if I pick it up the distributor gear, and reinstall it so the oil pump drive puts the reluctor lined up with the pick up, and then twist the distributor housing so the rotor gets to Cyl#1 firing position, it should be good to go?
The pre-lubing is also a bit of a dark magic to me at this point.
When the ignition have been sorted out, and the various accessories are bolted on, and it's almost ready to start the break-in, then it's time to prelube the engine.
All the how-to's I've read says to prime the oil system by using a drill and a priming shaft.
Now, won't this cause the distributor gear to spin, and also the cam?
I guess this will have to be done with the distributor gear off then?
Thinking of the time needed to reinstall distributor gear, intake, and carb, how long will the oil remain in the system, before it seeps down to the pan again?
If I by divine intervention should get the engine primed, all bolted on with oil still in the system, then it's time to fire up the engine. I saw a
Car... ...Chevy Craft article on breaking in a cam, and it was advised to prime the carb by filling gas carefully into the float bowl through the vent tube.
Sounds like a good idea, but should I stop pouring well before it's full, or is it just to top it off?
Also, the same article said to
make sure engine rpm never remains constant for the break-in period. Engine speed should vary between 2,000 and 3,000 the entire time. This ensures oil reaches all points on the camshaft. Do not merely set the fast idle on the choke and walk away from the engine. Do this apply to a Mopar small block too?