I have many questions to come, but first and foremost I'm hoping someone on this board can help me with the timing. Once I got everything put together the truck started and ran okay, the timing was at 23 degrees After TDC. I then looked in my factory tecnicians manual and it said "refer to timing sticker under hood", I checked my Haines manual and it said the same thing but gave 8 degrees Before TDC as a common example. I then checked my 1971 tecnicians manual that I use for my 71' Jimmy and it said 12 degrees before TDC. So, for now I have set my timing to 10 degrees Before TDC and it idles much better. I also ended up having to turn back the idle screw on the carb almost two full turns because as I advanced the timing, the rpms kept rising. Lastly, my exhaust no longer smells like gasoline. There is however a downside, my truck is now gutless off the line and has quite a bit of hesitation if I give it heavy throttle when accelerating either at low speeds or from a stop. Before I replaced all these parts and set the timing I chould chirp the tires off the line no problem.
Disclaimer: to my knowledge I did get an accurate timing reading. I capped off the vaccum advance at he carb and distributor, ran the truck to operating temp, found TDC compression stroke and marked it with timing tape on the balancer (the groove was off by a long shot sitting at 12 o' clock at TDC, plus where I put the tape coincided with the dot on the timing gears), chocked the truck and got my reading with the tranny in drive, and used the digital timing light to keep my rpm at 550, all as reccommended in the service manuals.