Unusual ignition problem - SOLVED!!
any progress made with the 64 inch swap?
Well, some progress has been made on the Jimmy, but the only thing I got done with the 64 swap so far is the nasty burning out of the factory bushings and the installation of the new poly bushings. So now the spring hangers, shackle flip, and the 64" springs are all ready to go, just have to get the Jimmy off the ground and swap the springs in. The problem with doing that at the moment is the fact that there is a 12,000lb scissor alignment rack stuck in my only bay at the shop with a lift. I have been refurbishing it for my other job, and although the main scissor rails of the rack are refurb'd and painted, I am just now finishing up all the accessory parts that go on the rack - and while I'm doing that, I had to keep the main rails inside out of the weather. So I've been pretty stuck for the last two weeks. I'm optimistic that the scissor rack will be leaving this coming week, so I'm hoping to get the 64 swap done next weekend.
In other news....
I finally figured out a problem with my TBI ignition system and I thought I'd tell you guys about it since it was something I have never seen in all my years with these systems.
I have been fighting a weird ignition problem for a while now in the Jimmy. It has a bone-stock 350 from a 1989 C1500 truck in it, complete with full wiring harness and TBI fuel injection system. It ran great right when I swapped it, but very shortly afterwards it started having some ignition issues. It seemed to me that the ignition module was the culprit, so I put in a new one. Ran great for a couple miles then coughed and sputtered again. Brought that module back and replaced it with yet another new one. Same thing. Put the factory GM module back in and it ran great, then a few miles down the road, same thing. Really strange. I threw cap, rotor, wires, plugs, new knock sensor module, etc... at it and still same issues.
Last weekend I printed out the full GM test procedure for the ignition system. I followed the flow chart to a tee, and I mean it was pretty invasive - we are talking about going so far as to pulling the computer, putting a specific resistance to certain pins and checking other pins to make sure things switched properly and crap like that. Checked all the wiring in the harnesses too, everything pointed exactly to the ignition module. So I changed it AGAIN, and - you guessed it - same problems. WTH????????????
So, as I was doing all this, one time when I put my hand on the distributor cap I thought I felt it move a little - much like the old HEI caps with the spring retainers - but this cap bolts down solid. So I checked the distributor against another one I had at the shop - an aftermarket one. The way these distributors are put together from GM is that there is an aluminum main machined housing shaft and a pressed on steel base that the cap bolts to. The GM one is simply pressed into place. The aftermarket one I had in my had was pressed on and then staked into place in numerous places around where the two meet. That in conjunction of my thought that the cap had moved made me look closely at things right there. My old distributor's pressed on steel plate was loose enough that it had rotated around the main base of the distributor and wasn't lined up properly any more. Although the magnetic pickup on the distributor tested properly, I can only assume that the mis-alignment of the cap to the base has been causing my problem all along - because after I swapped in the new distributor, everything cleared up instantly!! I even went so far as to swap in the original GM parts (from 1989!) that had been in there from the get-go, and with the new distributor in there, the truck runs awesome! Power is back, starting is flawless, and it even idles smooth as can be, without even a miss every once in a while like these systems so often have!! SO, as far as I can tell, the problem is FINALLY SOLVED!!!! Check your factory distributors people!!!
-Darren