Recap on Miss Firing
The keeper was all chewed up. Possibly from not being installed correctly or a possible flaw. I don't know how else it could have loosened up. The rotor cap showed signs of being rubbed and the shim was bent. It seems the rocker arm was not riding where it was supposed to be. The rotor cap was at a slight angle instead of being straight and the shim was also not sitting where it was designed to. There were no signs of wear on the valve stem, shining areas indicating rubbing. The rotor cap showed signs of wearing, around the hole to one side was really shiney. The shim was bent to a degree and unusable. I had tried to readjust the clearance between the rocker arm and cam but, no matter how much I turned it to increase the clearance, I still could not get a feeler gauge to clear. I replaced the rotor cap, shim and keepers and was able to obtain the necessary clearance between the rocker arm and cam. The groove in the valve stem were unaffected by all this, as was the valve guides. I had also asked a buddy of mine who restores classic USA cars to take a look at what had happened. He told me he had never seen anything like this before. So, I cannot say for certain what the cause was. I believe it was shoddy installation by a previous mechanic who worked on the car for a previous owner. I believe this because after I got the car, I found out the throttle linkage was installed incorrectly, among other so called repairs on the car. I haven't had the time, as of yet, to take the car out for a decent ride. I guess, when I do, that will be the true test. I have driven it around town and have not experienced any problems. I did a compression test and the readings are between 145 and 155 PSI on the cyclinders.
Rolf
1966 230SL Auto
1992 300D
1991 FLHS