B Distributor Initial Timing I have read a little about the B distributor and I am using one on my 30 Huckster. What I am not sure of is what initial timing I should set it up on. I have a Nurex Timing timing tab set with the pulley marked on TDC so I can check things with a timing light. Right now I have the initial set at 9.5 degrees but the engine wants to run hotter than it used to. Should I try more initial timing? What is everyone else running who is using the B distributor on their model A?
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Re: B Distributor Initial Timing I time mine by ear since I still have the A gear cover. I will note your answers for reference.
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Re: B Distributor Initial Timing What is the timing at 1500-2000 RPM.
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No idea. No tach. Approx what should the timing be there? |
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Re: B Distributor Initial Timing Set the initial timing at 17-18 Deg. That will get you in the ball park. The "B" distributor only has about 12-13 Deg. of mechanical advance. The mechanical plus the initial will give you about 30 Deg. total which is where you want to be. This is assuming that your "B" distributor is in good condition.
Chris W. |
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I was wondering if 17-18 was too much initial, but now you mention it, I am only getting about 12 or so advance. (I actually have 3 Model B distributors that I have refreshed and they all top out at about 12 degrees advance) Sounds like a plan. Thanks. |
Re: B Distributor Initial Timing Don't confuse crankshaft degrees with distributor degrees.
The mechanical advance of the B distributor was 8.5 degrees (17 crankshaft degrees) If you had a Model B timing cover, the initial timing would be 19 deg BTDC. The mechanical advance of the distributor would add 17 degreees to that, giving you a maximum of 36 degrees advance. Set your initial timing at 19 degrees. Other considerations: The model A distributor initial timing is at 0 deg BTDC, but the manual advance would allow you to move it to 40 deg. That is why it is always recommended to not advance the spark all the way... it is too advanced for an A engine. But it's lower compression was more tolerant of over advancing. The Model B engine had a higher compression head and a better cam. It's max advance of 36 deg was perfect for that combination. |
Re: B Distributor Initial Timing Thanks. I was thinking the B timing cover was 9.5 crankshaft degrees. That's why I earlier set mine on 9.5 degrees. I will try 19 and see how that works.
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Re: B Distributor Initial Timing I would not recommend setting base timing more than 12º. Any more than that and the engine could kick back while starting.
A distributor advance putting out 12º equals 24º at the crank. So 36º total is plenty. So if you have TDC marked on the pulley just raise the engine speed to a good cruise RPM and then guesstimate the amount of timing advance with the timing light. Or add a timing strip and you'll know for sure. |
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Joe K Who is currently going through converting a Model A block for use as a Gordon-Smith compressor using Model B distributor & timing. (Gordon Smith kind of relies on centrifugal variable timing to compensate for the automatic loading/unloading of the engine.) |
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Model A or model B engine timing..one degree of advance per thousand rpm is what you are shooting for.
diameter of pulley x3.1416 divided by 360 gives you degree spacing.On a model A stock crankshaft pulley 5 degrees is a bit over 1/4 "..or use your nurex timing grid and TDC mark.hook up timing light and cheapie garage sale tach and dwell meter (40 bucks on Amazon) start engine,at 500 rpm either move the breaker plate or turn the distributor cam (pain,you have to shut off the engine and fiddle with it) to be 5 degrees advanced at 500 rpm,10 degrees at 1000,15 degrees at 1500 and so on check up to 2000 rpm.Basically as rpm goes up you can see the mechanical advance rise,basically 'mapping' the advance,this tell you if your advance is working correctly.the b works well,what get confusing is static timing it,so dont,use a timing light. |
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Be sure to rill a hole in the cam screw to get oil the upper shaft,thats the weak point on the B distributor
If the engine runs up to 500 degrees toss a steak on the head.. |
Re: B Distributor Initial Timing Was playing around with timing. Not hard to start until almost 30 degrees. I now have the initial set on 19 degrees. No problem starting at all, sounds very good but it is raining so a test drive is out.
Jackshaft, One degree of advance per thousand RPM? Surely that is not right. |
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Re: B Distributor Initial Timing That is what I thought.
Thanks. |
Re: B Distributor Initial Timing If you have initial timing at 19 degrees, you should be spot on.
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If you do not have enough initial timing when using a "B" distributor, the engine will be too retarded and will run hot and be down on power. If you are running a 6.0 high compression head, it is not a good idea to have more than 28-30 deg. total timing at 2000 rpm. My opinion, Chris W. |
Re: B Distributor Initial Timing OK, I was wrong. I should have looked it up. I thought there was a 9.5º difference between the A and B front covers.
Apparently Model B base timing is 19º with minimal distributor advance totaling 36º. http://www.fordgarage.com/pages/bdistributoradvance.htm I know in 'more modern' cars I don't want base timing any more than 12º for kick back reasons. |
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