Re: Timing Marks
Yeah, I forgot to add the the "time off #7 'cause I have a different cam" is just ridiculous.....
Slipped balancers aren't really all that uncommon.
New damper, just for fun aligned it to the old one, both were the same.
I put this question out five years ago when it happened.
Rebuilt engine.
Static timed the distributor to #1 cylinder. Stock Thunderbolt, (1987)
Tried to start engine, backfire.
Turned distributor, engine running great.
Took the boat out ALL season, ran great.
That winter, I wanted to get to the bottom of this.
Pulled engine, removed timing chain cover. Noticed that the locating pin on the cam was at 9 o'clock instead of three o'clock, with the engine at TDC on number one cylinder. Keep in mind, the engine ran great all season long.
Got on the phone with Crane.
After about three hours, they called me back.
Told me to install cam as per the engine manual (Mercruiser, Chevy etc.) Then rotate engine 180 degrees, install chain.
To shorten the story, I reassembled the engine the same way it came apart, it ran great all season. Reinstalled the engine, went to #1 with a timing light, mark on damper was under the water pump not near the timing tab. Clipped on to number seven cylinder plug wire, timing mark is at 8 degrees on the timing tab. Engine runs great.