I wasn't sure so I did a quick Google search and read about 4-5 highlights that said you double the 8 cylinder reading for a 4 cylinder
Well it’s good to get the refresher on the old tech. It’s been since high school since I checked dwell. Thanks guys.I wasn't sure so I did a quick Google search and read about 4-5 highlights that said you double the 8 cylinder reading for a 4 cylinder
It’s not really a “show” car in that sense, as nobody in their right mind would award it a trophy. Especially if I take it to a Nomad convention. It will be in a “display only” category and not judged.I probably missed it but what are your plans for this - in the overall sense. Strictly shows, or gonna do some driving in it?
I don’t know exactly what pistons are in the 327 but I do know the compression is on the higher side. 10:1 wouldn’t be a stretch because I don’t remember it being happy on 91 octane juice.Yes, the 2818-1, I believe was 600 vac secondary. And an oem GM carb too. Pretty cool stuff!
the 30/30 cam was rowdy and mid to upper rpm. With 346* of duration/effectively @ .050 more like 254*, and a net lift of .455, it was meant to run. Note that this cam was only used in big valve heads (2.02/1.60) and high compression engines.
the 097 cam was much milder and originally used in the hi perf 283 and up to the 63 327-340&360hp engines. Those engines had 1.94/1.50 valves.
Rob, any idea what pistons are in the engine ?
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Wow, I never knew tach transmitters were a thing. It's basically a repeater, so whenever the distributor fires, the relay creates a parallel pulse. The advantage, of course, is that you isolate the tach from the nasty voltage spikes coming from the ignition coil. This would be so easy to accomplish with solid state electronics now I'll be surprised if nobody offers it. You might try NiMh batteries, as their discharge curve is pretty flat, although more like 1.25V. I would probably set an LM317 to 2.7V and power it from switched ignition (unless the goal is to keep it original, of course). This could be done with a potentiometer and the tach could be easily calibrated.
With a unit that old, there's a good chance one or both capacitors is bad. Do you have a DMM that can check them? Even with no batteries, the relay should chatter along with the distributor and you could set the clearance/dwell.
How I *think* it works, is that every time the points close and the ignition coil is charging, that capacitor charges to 2.7V. When the points open and the spark occurs, the energy stored in the capacitor is delivered to the tach. So the more often spark events happen, the higher the average voltage delivered. That means calibration of the tach depends on the capacitor value and the battery voltage.
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I’m not against building something as I have the ability and understand the schematic. But it’s one of a few dozen things I need to get done on the car plus a pile of work on the K5. I’m looking at it more from the convenience factor. I can add in the tach converter pretty quickly and just change the position of the wires to the terminals on the box. Outside of the most astute vintage tach nerd noticing the red wire on the wrong terminal nobody will know it’s been altered at all.You could also build a very simple circuit like this for a few $:
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It steals power from the ignition coil and triggers off the points through a little filtering so you get 1 event per spark. I'd like to see an optoisolator in there, but hey, it's cheap.
I bet you could also steal the guts out of any regular tach and with a little tweaking it would work the old tach head.
An LM2907 circuit like this is probably about $5.
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That technoversion box is nice, but you don't need most of the features (you already have a V8 tach in V8 car). I get it, though, a non-electronics person is going to just buy the box.
As much as I like stuffing led bulbs in everything I have, it would be wrong to do it to this car. The warm glow of the dash lights (which all work btw) is very nostalgic. I can remember looking over my dad’s shoulder in the middle of the night on our way to Omaha for a convention run to see the dash lit up. Dad was popping cinnamon fire jolly rancher candies and swigging Pepsi to keep alert. We left at one or two in the morning to get into town mid day and get a large chunk of the drive out of the way in the cool of the night vs heat of the day. I loved that the high beam indicator lit the bow tie in the cluster in red.The glow of that tach takes me waaaaay back. So cool.
Totally brought me back too. Can’t wait to fix the other one now too.Nice work Zoo, yep the tach video puts thoughts of several cars from my youth back in my head.