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Gepetto Gepetto is offline
Junior Member
 
First recorded activity by BoatBanter: May 2005
Posts: 3
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Terry Spragg
Gepetto wrote:

I changed the distributor cap, rotor, points, and condensor on an 1989
engine in a Donzi. It will now start like a champ, but won't run past
1000 rpm.

The "professional" mechanic says the timing and compressioin are right,
and I got the plug wires back in the right sequence. He thinks it might
have jumped a tooth in the timing chain.

Anybody with any ideas.



Check the spark, it might be weak now that you have replaced parts.
Put the old ones back on 'till you find which part it is. Check
the gap. The condenser might be bad. Also, check for fuel quantity
through the filter if all that doesn't work.

Old tech's truth: If you fixed it when it wasn't broke, and now it
is broke, you didn't fix it, you f*cked it. You need to f*ck it up
so it's the way it was and stop fixing stuff that ain't broke.

If you jumped a tooth, you will soon jump another. Then, it won't
work even worse. If you jumped a tooth, the distributor would be
out, and the timing wrong, 'cause it's driven from the cam. Your
mech is a quack. Did you take the dist out and put it back with an
extra twist? If you didn't, don't do it now!

Yeah, it sounds like a troll, but if that's what it takes to get you
noticed, you just keep it up. Soon, the method will fail.

Terry K
Thanks, Terry,
I put in 40 gallons of fresh fuel, and had the mechanic change the plugs. I put the old rotor and condenser back because I thought I got bad ones out of the box.
I wondered about the skipping a tooth on the timing chain theory when it ran so smoothly up to 1000 rpm.