I havn't posted an update lately so here goes
When I first rolled the car out of the garage under it's own power, the first thing I noticed was the toe setting on the front end was so far out that I was leaving black tread marks on the drive. Appearantly I had the incorrect drag link on the car when I last set the toe and now that I have the proper 111 part the toe was off by a mile. Once I got the shop halfway straightened I brought the car back in and set the front end by eyeball, by sighting down the sidewalls of the front tire untill it lined up with the sidewall of the rear tire, It was toed-in so far that sighting down the front sidewalls aligned to the center of the rear tire.
I took the scan of the fuse box lable that was sent to me by a member on the forum, Thanx again. Because my printer doesnt index the print onto the page I was having problems getting the print to line up on both sideds. I ended up croping away all the white space on the back side and replacing the back ground with a color that matched the yellowed paper of the scan. When I trimmed the card stock down to the front side, on the back though it was slightly out of ling there was no white areas to show through. Though I don't speak French or Spanish It looks great!
Next day I drive the car over to the tire shop for a proper alignment.
On the return trip to pick up the car, I spot it parked in the lot. It had been so long since I had seen the car anywhere but in my garage for that frist instant my thought was, "Hey there's an old SL over there! No,wait...it's mine".
Drove it home, tracked nicely down the road, but the speedo would only go to 40mph. I recalled that the speedo should read about twice the tach in 4th, so when I got home I took apart the speedo head and lubed it up with synthetic clock oil. Then I chucked up a short end from a speedo cable in my jewlers lathe. With the lathe motor reversed (turning clockwise) I spun it up to 130 mph for about 3 miles to loosten it up. Put it back in the dash and set out on a test drive and I also stopped to fill up the fuel tank.
The speedo still only would read 45 mph. I determined at this point that the spanner nut on the trans rear flange was loose. I decided to head down the highway to see how the alignment bahaved at road speed. I pulled onto the road wound it up to 3000 on the tach in 4th gear. Then the motor died whitout a sputter or miss, just nothing. I had enough inertia to get onto a siding and it would go no further.
The only tool I had with me was a screwdriver I found under the seat, I popped the hood and removed the cap, the points looked pitted so I used the tip of the screwdriver to scrape the face of the points as clean as possible. Placed the coil wire on top of the zundfolge where I could see it from inside the car cranked it over, no spark. I then called my older son on the cell phone, told him where I was and needed a ride home.
Since the car was off the highway I didn't feel any urgent need to get it home untill the next morning.
Daybreak arrives and I set out armed with a tool box, test lamp, remote stater button, a different coil, and condensor (I didn't have another set of points). Just for the halibut I crank the car over, it sputtered once but didn't start. Checking the coil wire again there was just a tiny trace of a spark. I file the points till they are shiny clean, now no spark at all.
I determine with the test lamp that somewhere between the coil and points something is grounding out.
I take out the terminal bolt and the fiberwashers and find a 4mm lock washer laying on the breaker plate grounding out the points lead.
I have this terrible habit of laying things on top of the battery when I'm working and I guess this washer rolled off the battery into the distributor.
Put everything back (but the washer) and it drove home. Andrew and I had to drive back later to get the van.
Yesterday I took apart the transmission mount plate. Does there realy need to be 14 bolts? Took out the flex disc and sure enough the spanner nut was loose. Now why didn't I think to check this before I installed the trans?
Uh I dunno.
I did remember to change the fluid though.
Because banging on a spanner nut with a chisel never works very well I decided to make myself a spanner socket. The nut was loose enough that it came out by hand. I took it along with me to the hardware store and found a 1/2" drive socket with the same OD as the spanner nut (an 1-1/8" socket) Then using my RotoZip tool's flex shaft and a Dremmel metal cutting disc I cut out four teeth that fit into the spanner nut. When the socket got too hot to hold by hand I would cool it in a bucket of water so it wouldn't loose its temper. I put it on my 1/2" impact and it worked perfectly.
Download Attachment: spanner.jpg27.87 KB
I'm still kinda gun shy about the ignition points, havn't driven it yet to check the speedo.
This morning I ordered a PerTronics point replacement kit. I looked at the Crane breakerless kit. And I just didn't like kits that are "Universal Fit" That usualy means they are made for everything but fit on nothing. I have read through the threads on these systems and lost of people prefer the Crane, but I'd rather go with a made to fit system. Also I think that no external switching box is a plus.
I'm going out to test drive the speedo now, I'll throw a unicycle in the trunk in case the ignition drops out again. This time I'll have a ride home.
Al :O)
113-042-10-014715
built 11 Jan 66
904/396 blue, Ivory Tex
condition- rust bucket