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Re: [TR] Do Rotors Really Fail?

To: foxtrapper@ispwest.com, 75TR6@tr6.danielsonfamily.org,
Subject: Re: [TR] Do Rotors Really Fail?
From: MMoore8425@aol.com
Date: Fri, 14 Jul 2006 18:16:52 EDT
In a message dated 7/14/2006 10:03:31 AM Pacific Standard Time,  
foxtrapper@ispwest.com writes:

Rotors  don't wear out and need replacing nearly as often as parts 
manufacturers  would have you believe.  While I've had rotors fail 
mechanically,  that is actually quite rare.

You get a couple of things going on under  the distributor cap that cause the 
rotor, and cap, to wear out.

The  rotor spins against the carbon button in the center of the cap.  This  
produces carbon dust that coats everything.  That promotes arcing to  ground 
and not the plugs.  Once this starts, usually called carbon  tracking, it's 
remarkably difficult to stop it.  The carbon tracks  get embedded into the 
plastic and wiping doesn't remove them.

As  the spark jumps across the small gap between the rotor and the cap lug it 
 
produces an arc and blasts a little bit of the metal off.  Make it a  soft 
metal like many cheap caps use, and you can really wear things away  after a 
few million arcings.  Now you've got a great big gap instead  of a small gap. 
Which promotes misfiring.  The metal blasted off by  the arc is usually 
vaporized and gets to redeposit itself inside the cap  just like the above 
carbon does.  Again, promoting arcing to ground  and such.

While it would sound like you could clean up the rotor and  just replace the 
cap, that will generally wear out the carbon contact  button in the center of 
the cap in short order.  The rotor gets worn  from the previous carbon 
button, and doesn't match up well with the new  one, and grinds it down. 
Sorta like putting new brake shoes on nasty brake  drums, the shoes wear out 
quickly as a result.

Wipe down the inside  of the rotor and cap to prevent carbon arcing from 
every occurring.   Dress the contact points on the rotor and the cap.  Do 
that and you  can add many years to the life of the  components.




The Jaguar group has had a lot of failures of newly maufactured  rotors. 
There seems to be a manufacturing problem. I think it has to do with  arcing 
through the plastic to the distributor shaft.
 
Best, Mike Moore 


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