T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
50.1 | Distributor service? | AKOCOA::TFISHER | | Thu Jul 11 1991 09:06 | 10 |
|
Does anyone know of a machine shop in the southern NH/Boston MA
area that does distributor work? I'm looking to have mine spun up to
check the advance curve, and rebuilt if necessary.
Any ideas?
Thanks,
Tom
|
50.2 | Accurate Speedometer | MR4DEC::CWHITE | | Wed Jul 17 1991 10:59 | 7 |
| Accurate Seedometer has the technology/means to do it!
Right off 93 towards boston, by Duff Spring!
anyone know better directions?
chet
|
50.3 | rear mount battery | CNTROL::REARWIN | the quality of mercy is not strained | Mon Sep 09 1991 09:03 | 5 |
| I'm going to mount the battery in the trunk of the 76 Camaro. A kit at
NE Speed I passed on for $50 had ground connected to the rear subframe.
Sounds kind of shaky to me. I'd rather get a kit having a battery box
and 2 cables running to the front of the car. Suggestions? Hints?
Prices? Matt
|
50.4 | Ground it to the engine or xmission | TINCUP::MFORBES | This Space Intentionally Left Blank | Mon Sep 09 1991 09:35 | 6 |
| I used the Summit remote battery kit for the Vega. It also had a short
negative cable. I went down to the local Western Auto store and bought
a 72" cable which I connected to the tailshaft of the transmission.
The Summit kit was $34.95.
Mark
|
50.5 | source for any cabling needs | CNTROL::REARWIN | the quality of mercy is not strained | Fri Sep 13 1991 10:58 | 4 |
| Since someday I hope to have a high compression BB chevy under the
hood, I went with dual lengths of double-0 gauge cable. From Sexton on
Rt. 20 in Shrewsbury, the new Delco cables set me back about a buck.
Matt
|
50.6 | never had a problem | TROOA::GILES | | Wed Oct 02 1991 22:30 | 5 |
| I've never had a problem with the short ground strap mounted to the
rear frame. I figure the whole body 'must' conduct at least as well as
a 1/2" cable.
Stan
|
50.7 | I like 00 gauge | BARUBA::REARWIN | the quality of mercy is not strained | Thu Oct 03 1991 09:00 | 7 |
| My starting is working good. In a camaro, with the rubber mounting of
the engine and tranny, and the rubber mounting of the front subframe to
the body I think the ground path would be poor. I'm going to run
a small gauge wire from the + terminal to the radio, because even as
is, on cold mornings, the voltage drop at the starter is enough to
clear the clock and station presets on the radio.
Matt
|
50.8 | I _hate_ when this happens. | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Tue Jul 13 1993 09:47 | 27 |
| Hi y'all,
I'm not much of an electrical wiz so, here goes.
My Z28 had been acting up lately, sputtering (missing) and stuff.
I noticed my tach (electric) bouncing wildly between 2000 - 5000 rpm
while at a constant speed on the freeway. I had accidentally slammed
a gear (I have a ratchet shifter) a little to hard, and I noticed
the ignition key became stuck in the ignition. I figured it was just
a lot of little glitches.
Well, on night I brought my car out and I really started having
problems. My cars electrical system became decharged and I went
home on the hook (a common occurance). To my surprise, I noticed
I could then remove the key from the ignition (lightbulb!). I looked
at the battery and the positive terminal was melted. I went and
got a new battery which I began to hook up. Negative first and then
I touched the positive cable to the positive terminal and it sparked
like crazy.
Couple questions:
What the heck happened :') (sounds like I may have a short somewhere)
Where you you look first or how would you troubleshoot this situation?
Regards,
Mike
|
50.9 | Might want to check linkage... | ELWOOD::JOHNSON | | Tue Jul 13 1993 10:39 | 10 |
| I'm not sure if your two problems are related or not, but I had a
similar ignition switch problem when changing the transmission in my
Camaro. I'll assume that your car is an automatic with a floor shifter.
There is a rod from the steering column to the shift linkage that
prevents the shifter from moving when the ignition is off. There's a
good chance that this needs adjusted or is loose, especially since you
said you slammed a gear. I can't remember off the top of my head which
way to adjust it though, but it's in the Chilton's.
Tim
|
50.10 | He really did "write the book" ! | SALEM::NORCROSS_W | | Mon Nov 15 1993 05:36 | 11 |
| I received a catalog from the "Classic Motorbooks" company last week.
Amongst the hundreds of great books listed is "How to Do Electrical
Systems" by Skip Readio. "Back by popular demand" it says. Gees,
Skip, when others said you wrote the book on electrical systems, I
didn't realize you actually "wrote the book" on electrical systems.
I'll have to buy a copy and get you to autograph it. By the way,
who are the two babes on the front cover?
If anybody is interested in this catalog, the tel# is: 800-826-6600.
They have some really good books that you won't find in any bookstores.
Wayne
|
50.11 | Reprinted with most of the publisher's staff-induced errors corrected | CSLALL::NASEAM::READIO | A Smith & Wesson beats four aces, Tow trucks beat Chapman Locks | Mon Nov 15 1993 14:15 | 7 |
| > I'll have to buy a copy and get you to autograph it. By the way,
> who are the two babes on the front cover?
They're from Idaho. One of Tex Smith's nieces and her friend if I
remember correctly.
|
50.12 | A faux pas........:-) | SANTEE::AUGENSTEIN | | Mon Nov 15 1993 14:29 | 14 |
| > Gees,
> Skip, when others said you wrote the book on electrical systems, I
> didn't realize you actually "wrote the book" on electrical systems.
> I'll have to buy a copy and get you to autograph it.
CUT IT OUT, WAYNE!
Listen, guy. *Skip* knows he knows, and *we* know he knows, but it just won't do
to encourage him like this. There'll be no living with the guy for weeks to
come. :-)
SHEESH!
Bruce :-)
|
50.13 | How I got my copy! | USHS01::HARDMAN | Massive Action = Massive Results | Mon Nov 15 1993 17:43 | 9 |
| All ya gotta do is get transferred half way across the country, sell
Skip a nice old Mopar for cheap bucks just before you leave (since you
won't need a winter rat in warm country), have someone invite him to
your surprise going away party during a blizzard, let him see how you
behave when you're totally $h!tf@ced, and then he'll give you a signed,
autographed copy of his book. :-) :-) :-)
Harry, holder of such a gem, complete with the publisher-induced errors
|
50.14 | Pardon me? | SANTEE::AUGENSTEIN | | Tue Nov 16 1993 06:22 | 5 |
| What was that part about the "nice old Mopar"?
AHEM. :-)
Bruce
|
50.15 | One mans junk... ;-) | USHS01::HARDMAN | Massive Action = Massive Results | Tue Nov 16 1993 20:05 | 7 |
| Bruce, remember the eye of the beholder and all that. ;-) Skip swears
that thing would lay rubber after he did a valve job on it. His
daughter drove it for nearly 3 years after that. Not bad for a $150
car!!! :-)
Harry
|
50.16 | Mallory Unilite question | COMET::WARNOCK | | Mon Apr 18 1994 18:03 | 15 |
| I just picked up a new Mallory Unilite and ProMaster
coil from a guy for a song. This has never been installed
but has been through a few hands. Needless to say, the
instruction sheets are long gone. I figure that it is
a straight-forward installation as there are only three
wires from the distributor...one red, one green, and one
black.
My question is, does anyone know which wire is
for what? I am changing the engine in my chevy truck
this weekend and would like to install the distributor
along with it. The truck is a '70 if that matters any.
Thanks in advance.
Tim
|
50.17 | Quick observation | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Tue Apr 19 1994 07:34 | 12 |
| Tim,
I just traced out my Z28 which has a Mallory HyFire.
Looking at the unit on the firewall, the order of the wires is
Black, Red, Green.
I have an HEI distributor.
Black is the ground wire and goes to a ground
Red I assume is the hot wire and it makes its way to the distributor
and is plugged into the terminal that says BATtery. Green, as best
I can tell (since mine goes into a connector and then comes out as
a different color wire) makes its way back to the distributor
somewhere. I'll try and dig out the instructions for it during lunch.
|
50.18 | Another quick observation... | SSDEVO::SHUEY | | Wed Apr 20 1994 00:46 | 26 |
| re: .16
Tim,
I have a Mallory Unilite conversion unit in a GM points style
distributor. It has three wires: brown, green, and red.
The the three wires go to a connector, and the mating harness has
black, green, and red. The green wires mate and the red wires mate,
but the brown wire mates to the black wire of the harness.
The red wire is connected to ignition (+12v), the black wire is
connected to ground on the engine, and the green wire is connected to the
coil (-) terminal. Since my car is a '75, the factory ignition wire
wasn't a resistor wire, and provides +12v when the ignition switch is in
the run position. There is an aftermarket ballast resistor connected
between the factory ignition wire and the (+) terminal of the coil.
I'm pretty sure the the factory ignition wire on a '70 GM truck is a
resistor wire, so you probably should run the red wire directly to the
ignition terminal on the ignition switch. Leave the factory resistor
wire connected to the (+) terminal of the coil, connect the green wire
to the (-) terminal of the coil, the black wire to ground, and you should
be all set.
Tom
|
50.19 | Thanks | COMET::WARNOCK | | Wed Apr 20 1994 02:28 | 7 |
|
re:last couple
Thanks much for the information. Hopefully I can have
it all running this weekend.
Tim
|
50.20 | Holy cow, no wonder the battery terminal was melting | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Thu Apr 21 1994 22:15 | 43 |
| Well, I've gotten my, er, situation together finally and was able
to go down into my garage and have a peek at my Z28. In continuance of
.8,
I traced the heavy guage wire from the + on my battery terminal to the
starter, or is that the solenoid on top of the starter, and sure enough
the wire is, shall we say, destroyed.
I'll describe the wire, make a couple of assumptions and then ask
for a 2nd - 20th opinion.
The wire is frayed extremely bad right in front of the ringlet that
screws onto the solenoid. There are about 15 wires that make up the
cable and about 4 of them are still intact, the rest were mangled big
time. It's almost like the cable was chewed by an animal. The
insulation was obviously melted very badly. I've removed the cable
and I'm still gawking at it. Working on my machine solo was always
a pain in my ass, but I'm getting my confidence back.
I'm wondering if an animal did chew through the cable, causing it to
massivly short out (thus causing the massive failure of the wire), or
is there sufficient current to cause such bad damage to the wire?
The wire was securly tie wrapped away from my headers, but there is
an extremely tight fit. Could, over time, the insulation have melted
even if the wire was 2 inches away from the closest primary tube, then
causing the failure? Could I have a problem with my starter or the
solenoid which would have caused the wire to burn up like that? Could
there be a problem elsewhere in the car which would have caused the
wire to burn up? Judging from the condition of this wire (cable, you
have to see it to believe it), could I have damaged anything electrical
in the car eleswhere? I never blew any fuses, and I'm curious as to
why something like this didn't trip a fuse before possibly burning my
car up.
I'll listen for your advice. The current game plan is to recharge
the battery and replace the cable. Theoretically, my car should fire
up and run fine (I hope). Then I'll blow the cob webs out of it and keep
an eye on the cable to see if any damage is re-occuring. FWIW: When
this deal happened to my car, it was parked in a car port. Now my
car is garaged, so if an animal did get at it, it shouldn't happen
again. I hope this is a straight forward deal.
MadMike
|
50.21 | Frayed first, heated later | SALEM::NORCROSS_W | | Fri Apr 22 1994 06:39 | 14 |
| Mike, the cable running to the starter is not fused. It is designed to
handle a high amount of current for only a short period of time. It
would require a pretty big fuse to not blow everytime you cranked the
motor. Assuming that your starter motor is in good shape, I suspect
that your cable became frayed over time. Once a number of wire strands
fractured, then the rest of the intact strands were trying to pass more
current than they were designed to handle. So they heated up and
melted your insulation. By all means replace the cable with a new one
and make sure your starter motor is in good working order. And keep
the battery cables clean so they don't self-destruct over time. This
is especially true for the braid style ground strap that often runs
from the engine block to the frame. They corrode real bad over time.
Wayne
|
50.22 | Battery cable repair 101 | CSLALL::NASEAM::READIO | A Smith & Wesson beats four aces, Tow trucks beat Chapman Locks | Fri Apr 22 1994 09:14 | 62 |
| Wired that are subject to flexing should not have soldered-on terminals
because the strands will fracture at the point where they enter the
terminal (or where the solder bond ends)
Wires that are subject to flexing should have a crimp-on terminal, instead.
When a crimp terminal is installed on the end of a wire it should extend
over the insulation as well. A soldered terminal will not extend over the
insulation.
The barrel of the crimp extends over the wire (or cable) insulation so that
the insulation provides a strain relief, thus spreading the flex over a
wider area.
The initial installation of your battery cable was one where the cable was
allowed to flex as the engine rocked back and forth. The heat from the
exhaust melted away the insulation and the flex was concentrated at the
base of the terminal. Eventually the wires broke at the terminal.
The proper methods to repair this damage are:
1. Clamp the cable to the starter solenoid and solder a new terminal onto
the end of the cable.
Procedure: You'll probably need a small propane torch to
generate enough heat. Heat the terminal, puddle the solder down in along
the side. As more solder fills the well in the terminal, the heat will be
transferred into the strands of the wire and eventually the whole end of
the wire will be filled with solder. The strands of wire will have to be
absolutely clean before you start or the solder won't stick to them.
Wash off all the accumulated grease and oil, spread the strands and sand or
wire brush the oxidation off the individual wires. they'll be pretty
blackened from the excessive heat that's been generated from trying to
operate the starter on only a few strands of wire.
2. install a crimp connector, making sure to crimp the wire over the
insulation as well. Securing the free end of the cable is optional. Again
, the grease and oil should be removed first, oxidation isn't as big a
problem as you'll be compressing the wired into a homogeneous mass and the
oxidation will get scraped around a bit. If you want to take the time to
clean the strands, the job will be better, electrically.
3. Install a screw-on terminal, making sure the insulation extends into the
collet so that it gets crimped at the back end of the collet. Securing the
free end of the cable is optional. Same cautions as 2.
3. replace the cable with a new one from a parts store. Securing the free
end of the cable is optional. Simplest and fastest route, since the others
will require removal of the cable, anyways (to do the job correctly)
Since you have a header clearance problem, I'd secure the cable more for
reasons of preventing it from contacting the hot exhaust than to prevent
the end from fraying in the last three options.
BTW, if the end of the cable is as bad as you say, there's probably been
some serious overheating of the plastic cap on the solenoid as well. You
may end up breaking the plastic end when you try and remove the battery
cable or when you give it that last grunt to make sure it's tight.
Consider replacing the solenoid cap. I Believe NAPA sells the cap alone.
|
50.23 | | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Mon May 02 1994 20:57 | 14 |
| Now that I have my electrical problem "fixed" (I hope), I took
my car out for a little spin today. Everything appeared relativly
normal until about 7 miles from my house. I noticed the voltmeter
drop down to about 8 - 9 volts, just in front of the red (warning)
section. I turned around and headed back home, and noticed a high
pitched squeeling (which could have been my imagination, or the bearing
in my alternator). The voltmeter then swung back up to 13 or so
volts.
Why did the guage drop? Is there something I should check. I just
had the alternator tested to see if it was damaged when I shorted
my car out, and it tested fine. Is this a non-event?
MadMike, call me paranoid.
|
50.24 | | CNTROL::REARWIN | think pure thoughts | Tue May 03 1994 10:11 | 6 |
| How's the belt tension? Are there any large + wires loose anyplace?
Maybe the problem is trying to stuff that overgrown big block into that little
engine compartment. ;-)
Matt
|
50.25 | I need to rehang my alternator for one thing... | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Tue May 03 1994 11:46 | 14 |
| I'll proof read the wiring. I did have a major electrical short
a while back. I just never noticed this occur before.
The belt tension, etc.. may be an issue. I need to shim up the
alternator, since when I eyeball it, it looks to be around 1/4"
out of alignment. That's probably why it'll toss the belt if I
push the engine over 4500 rpm.
It's the little things, but I'm taking it day by day and don't let
the little glitches and stuff eat at me. I'm actually having fun
doing this again (at the moment). :^) Even got a few "looks"
yesterday.
MadMike
|
50.26 | Not charging battery | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Wed May 03 1995 08:43 | 12 |
| Wow, one year ago... and I just got around to fixin it.
I replaced my alternator with an identical 65amp deal. I bought a
new battery. I hooked up all the wires, made sure the belt is tight
and tightened all the bolts. The car fired rather easily, warmed up
quickly and idled after about 1 minute.
My volt meter is reading 8 volts. The car is not charging. Where
should I look knowing the battery/alternator are new? Do I have
a wire that's broken? Could my gauge be broken?
MadMike
|
50.27 | Use volt meter across batt. terminals | SUBSYS::WOJDAK | | Wed May 03 1995 10:14 | 10 |
| Try putting a Volt meter across the battery terminals. You should read
between 14V - 15V with the car running if the charging system is
working correctly.This will also let you know if the gauge is faulty.
Is the voltage regulator built into the alternator? If not, this could
be a possibility.
Rich
|
50.28 | Look Ma, no battery" | WMOIS::BOUDREAU_C | So take your GreyPoupon my freind... | Fri May 05 1995 16:40 | 8 |
| Mike,
Look for a "fuseable" link somewhere in the engine compartment. Also,
the way "I" test a cahrging system is to pull the (+) lead off of the
battery once the enigine is started. It should be able to run all of
the electrical stuff with no battery.
CB
|
50.29 | AH... (I'd pull my hair out if I had some to pull out) | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Fri May 05 1995 22:01 | 31 |
| CB,
Clarify. Fire up the car, and take the positive lead off. I assume
I should wrap it in something just to be safe. What am I going to
see? Is my volt meter going to change, or will it still read "8 volts"
meaning "eventually when you shut off your car, I'm gonna be dead
again". I recall once barely making it home when my voltage regulator
was dead. Just to fire the plugs was enough to kill it eventually.
Which brings me to the fusable link. Where would it be? Where do
I start looking.
I have the 2 heavy wires to the battery and starter. Those are
ok. There's the medium guage red wire to the back of the alternator, and
then there's 2 wires that plug into the top of the alternator.
What do those 3 wires do specifically? Would the fusable link
be on one of those 3? Near the fire wall? (All three wires are
wrapped in plastic sleave). If there's a problem it's probably
with one of those 3 wires. I don't think it's the alternator because
it's brand new, but you never know, and I haven't tested it yet...
so it's probably one of those 3 above mentioned wires, or a combination
of them. Give me a head start. The car is a Camaro. The wires
have been installed/removed at least 410 times so I'm sure that over
the years they *could* very well be damaged. How does the alternator
put a charge back into the battery? Let me guess, it's one of the
3 wires I need to check. The medium guage one?
Thanks for your suggestions.
MadMike
|
50.30 | Gonna make some noise in an hour or two. :^D | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Mon May 22 1995 14:42 | 15 |
| The moral of the story is I got sold a dead alternator. I didn't
panic, and I didn't rush to tear into the wireing. I unbolted the
alternator and brought it back to (vendor) and they tested it.
Yup... it's dead. New new one puts out 16 volts. Hopefully it'll put
out 16 volts when I start this pig up this afternoon after work.
I guess the rule here is DON'T MAKE ASSUMPTIONS.
I guess today the test is to make sure the alternator stays put and
doesn't slip. I may have to lock-tight the bolts that hold it, and
use a 10# hammer to, er, "adjust" the braket a tad. I'm also going to
order a deep groove pully for the alternator so I stop tossing the
belt off at very inconvinient times.
MadMike
|
50.31 | Is it really Painless? | FORTY5::SHUEY | | Mon Aug 19 1996 13:15 | 16 |
|
Has anyone heard of a company called "Painless Wiring"? They
sell wiring harness kits that are supposed to be "easy" to install.
My brother has a 67 Firebird that has a butchered wiring harness,
and he is considering buying the complete harness that "Painless
Wiring" offers.
Any experience with this company? Good experiences can be posted
here, bad please send to FORTY5::SHUEY.
Thanks,
Tom
|
50.32 | wrong application for that style | CSLALL::NASEAM::READIO | A Smith & Wesson beats four aces, Tow trucks beat Chapman Locks | Mon Aug 19 1996 15:46 | 32 |
| Painless (Dennis Overholtzer) makes a decent harness. It's a GM-style
fusebox with groups of wires that run to the engine, the front lighting,
the instruments, the rear lighting/fuel tank, etc.
Centech makes an identical wiring kit.
The difference between the two is that Centech labels EVERY wire with it's
destination. With the Painless kit you need to read the destructions,
first to figure out which wire goes to the left blinker, which goes to the
right blinker, etc.
Both kits are relatively easy to install, however, 6 years later - when
something goes bad -- the Centech kit is easier to troubleshoot because
all of the wires are labeled.
Now, if I were doing this job, I'd spring for an OEM harness or go for an
after-market harness that's custom made for the vehicle.
Most Camabird and Chevelle harnesses are available from places like Year One
and the like.
The benefit derived from using those harnesses is that they, quite simply,
plug in. You *don't* have to Mickey Mouse the connections to the fuel
gauge, the dome light, the turn signals, the headlights, the dash lights
(printed circuit board)
I've used all three methods and, quite frankly, for a post-'48 car nothing
beats a factory or factory-repro harness.
The Centech, Painless, Ron Francis, RAC, etc are for race cars or street
rods, not late models. In a late model, they're often messier looking than
what three teenager previous-owners could accomplish under the dash.
|
50.33 | | FORTY5::SHUEY | | Mon Aug 19 1996 17:10 | 11 |
|
Thanks Skip,
That's the kind of information I was looking for. This car isn't
going to be restored to factory original. Ease of installation is
the most important thing, since my brother is going to do the
installation, and he isn't great with wires, and doesn't want to have
to mickey mouse the connections. I'll relay the information to him.
Tom
|
50.34 | Following up... | FORTY5::SHUEY | | Mon Sep 30 1996 19:45 | 18
|