
So...whats next gentlemen?
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Moderators: Cal_Gary, T. Highway, Monkey Man, robi
I must note that the civilian oil pump has a centered slot and the dizzy has a centered tang. with the civilian setup it is possible to install the dizzy 180 out. where as the military dizzy will only fit in one way with its offset tang and slot.pwrwagonfire wrote: I have the manual for the M-37, but I don't have a military distributor
I am getting power to the distributor, just not firing...I replaced the coil, and confirmed I am getting voltage to the coil, I put a plug on the engine block and got a weak spark, so today I replaced the points and condenser...so far I have new cap, rotor, points, condenser, and spark plugs...I have also rewired and cleaned up/checked the wiring in the ignition system and can confirm that it is indeed wired correctlymajorhitt wrote:I didn't read all the post. Did you check for voltage to the distr.? Then check the coil. Check for a good ohm reading from dist to the frame. 0.02 Ohms Do you have no spark what so ever? Took a plug out and saw a spark to the eng block?
majorhitt wrote:Well It sounds the same as mine now. I tried all the items you mentioned. Weak spark or that what it looked like. After several friends helping and no progress, A friend of a friend came over and we put it on a roll back. At his garage he checked every thing,even a small scope down the plug hole to check the valve position (open or closed), still not firing. His garage had a very long down hill drive way, He said every thing indicates that this should be able to run. Then he said lets push it down the driveway and see if it will start. I said you're close enough to the river let's just push it in the river( at this point I was so frustrated that sounded like a good idea) Any way we pulled it out of the garage got the tow vehicle out of the way gave it a push with another and less than twenty feet it was running. Now for the fun part, It had no brakes and I was going down hill. Well anyway from that point on it starts like it should. The motor was just a little too tight after the rebuild. Not enough push to keep the motor turning. At times It would sound like it wanted to but didn't. Now it turns over easy and runs good. hope this helps.
Better late than never!w30bob wrote:Hi pwrwagonfire,
A cracked exhaust manifold won't affect compression or the engine's ability to start. Sorry for coming to this party late.....but how about a little recap?
The truck did run when parked last, right? Or was it not run since the engine was rebuilt?
If it was run after it was rebuilt.....how long did it sit between the last time it ran and now?
You poured gas down the intake, but is the carb spraying fuel like it's supposed to?
The choke is working, right?
It is timed right now, right?
What did you do to the truck, if anything, between now and the last time it ran?
regards,
bob
if it is below freezing even a good running flatty is tricky to start. I feel the need to mention that the flathead will not run on ether alone no matter how much you spray.pwrwagonfire wrote: when this snow stops!
m37jarhead wrote:New engine? Not run for a while? Valve or valves stuck open?
I'd take a compression test on each cylinder.
I'd also pull the M37 with a chain or strap.....get that engine spinning at higher
rpm than you can with a starter...... worked on my GPW and
it ran perfect after that. Had weak spark and engine was not run in months/years.
Still don't know why it would not hit right off after sitting. Pulling it worked.
Jerry