My car ran reasonably well for quite a while. Then I decided to rebuild the cylinder head due to a little blue smoke showing up when I shifted gears. The valve guides were replaced, the cylinder head milled very slightly, and the valves and valve seats were ground (new intake valves were installed). I finally finished installing the head and am trying to get the engine to fire, without any luck.
Here’s what I’ve done so far:
1. I removed the distributor cap and wires when I began tearing down the engine, but did not change the settings (at first) so I thought that the timing should have been the same.
2. I set the intake and exhaust valve settings at 0.003 and 0.007 inches respectively.
3. I cleaned the spark plugs and re-set the gaps at 0.020 inches (plugs were almost new-maybe 500km on them).
4. I refilled the radiator after tightening all of the hose clamps.
5. I changed the oil and filter (it was rather old, and I will change it again shortly after I get the engine running).
6. I recharged the battery.
7. The engine turns easily and rapidly using the starter drive, with no funny noises (no indication of valves hitting the cylinder head at that speed). The engine did not start running.
8. I used a strobe to insure there was power getting to the spark plugs.
9. I changed the fuel filter. I then removed the fuel lines from each cylinder, put each into a small container, and turned the engine over several times. Each cylinder is receiving approximately the same amount of fuel. (Then I reinstalled and tightened the injection lines). The engine did not start.
10. Thinking that the fuel had deteriorated since I last used the car, I drained (most of) the gas and put in 4 gallons of premium. Again, the engine did not start.
11. I have turned the distributor in both directions trying to get the engine to start. Alas, it has not started yet.
One cylinder would fire at the first moment I turned the engine over, but it sounded more like a backfire rather than a normal ignition.
I pulled the distributor cap and looked at the rotor position with regards to where the engine timing mark (0 ° TDC) was. It did not look to be where I thought it should be, so I pulled the spark plugs and turned the engine over by hand until the lobes on cylinder 1 were in the 10 o’clock/2 o’clock position and the notch in the thrust washer behind the camshaft sprocket lined up with the mark on the bearing support post. It confirmed my previous thought.
Does anybody have some photos showing the distributor rotor in place when cylinder 1 is at 0 ° TDC? That might give me a good place to start.
Any other ideas would be appreciated.
Ken
'66 230SL (4-speed, euro)