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Picklestein-help bring him back to health!

To: mgs@Autox.Team.Net
Subject: Picklestein-help bring him back to health!
From: Teacher122@aol.com
Date: Tue, 30 Sep 1997 23:45:16 -0400 (EDT)
My recently resurrected 1979 MGB is suffering  two maladies that I believe
that I have a handle on, but I would like other opinions in case my thoughts
don't pan out.
      The car is extremely hard to start.  I have visually reset the timing
after the rebuild, but my timing light will not fire when hooked to the #1
plug wire(It fires on all other wires) indicating that the #1 cylinder is not
receiving spark.  The car is missing and pulling the wire has little effect
on the idle (Yes, I did try switching wires- this is a #1 spark phenomina).
 While the engine was in the shop, I cleaned the distributor(original Lucas I
believe), and I did move the gap between the timing rotor and the impulse
pickup.  I suspect that I will have to readjust this.  Does anybody have a
procedure and/or the gap specs?
     The other area of concern was that when I broke in the cam, the
catalytic converter glowed a bright red indicating an over-rich condition.
 This may be related to the fact that the #1 cylinder is apparently not
receiving spark, or it might be related to the fact that I also took the
opportunity to adjust the  Zenith Stromberg 175 carburetor while the car was
down.  First suspect is the fact that I used the "mixture adjustment tool" to
bottom out the mixture needle and then I opened it three complete turns per
my Haynes manual.  Would this cause the over-rich condition?  Which direction
do I turn it to lean it out?   I also adjusted the choke(For the life of me,
I haven't figured the effect of that strange contraption).  Which way do I
turn it to pull it off earlier?  Thanks again for your help!

Tom Green
1979 MGB

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