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Timeing Mark......


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I've done the 5spd D/R swap into my EA81 Hatch, used the EA82 flywheel. If you've done this you know the timeing marks are off now. My question is, can I just find TDC and put a notch on the flywheel and use that to set my timeing???? Anyone else done this???? Thanks, Tim

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I've done the 5spd D/R swap into my EA81 Hatch, used the EA82 flywheel. If you've done this you know the timeing marks are off now. My question is, can I just find TDC and put a notch on the flywheel and use that to set my timeing???? Anyone else done this???? Thanks, Tim

 

I use the marks on the ea82 flywheel on my Brat... I think it depends on what body the flywheel came from.....

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I've done the 5spd D/R swap into my EA81 Hatch, used the EA82 flywheel. If you've done this you know the timeing marks are off now. My question is, can I just find TDC and put a notch on the flywheel and use that to set my timeing???? Anyone else done this???? Thanks, Tim

 

I know this doesn't have anything to do with your question, but did you have to use a shortened EA82 Driveshaft to do the swap in your hatch, or is there another option?

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as far as i can tell that should work perfect. its funny, the timing holes on the ea81 compared to the ea82 are very far apart, but whenever i remark an ea81 flywheel for the ea82 engine, the tdc marks only end up about 15 degrees apart. miles fox confirmed this when he was up here last year.

 

then only thing that i would worry about is the initial timing of the disty. if your disty sits at 15 degrees advance at rest and you point the rotor dead on at 1, then you will be marking a 15degrees advanced mark. im pretty sure the rotors dont just sit at 0degrees.

 

maybe i can just measure my ea81 flywheel marked for the ea82 and tell you how far apart they are.

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You need a tool that screws into the #1 spark plug hole that will stop the piston as you carefully turn the engine over by hand. I have made this tool for small block chevy engines. I hollowed out a spark plug, taped the inside, threaded a bolt with jamb nut through. You set the depth of this bolt to stop the piston before TDC, mark the flywheel were the pointer is on the bell housing. Carfully turn the engine backwards till the piston contacts the bolt, mark the flywheel at bell housing mark. Measure the distance between these marks and divide by two, that gives you true TDC.

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You have to have somthing to STOP the piston before TDC or your two marks are going to be in the same place. You can by this tool. It is not a "shade tree" method. Also I said twice, to CAREFULLY turn the engine over. If your not competent enough to CAREFULLY performe this task buy all means don't. You could put a hole in the top of your piston!

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mcbrat, they are so close, what if your are a few degrees off because of this?

just a thought

 

hmmm. I had my timing at 10 BTDC according to the ea82 stock flywheel marking while MorganM and I were bombing around the hills at Castana....

 

I'll be dropping a different ea81 into my 87 wagon here shortly, and I can compare to the ea81 ...

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ok, i just looked, im runing an ea81 flywheel on the er27, same as ea82, as far as marks go. my 20degree mark is punched at 15degrees.

 

id guess if you ran an ea82 flywheel on an ea81 and went by the marks, youd be runing 5 less degrees of timing, right?

 

i marked mine by sticking the ea82 flywheel on the motor, moved it to 20 btdc, took it off, put on the ea81 flywheel, and punched it where the arrow pointed, which was 15btdc.

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Rick set the dizzy, I just had to move it a tooth. It runs great, but in the persuite of perfecting my Weber carb I want to be able to get the optimale timing out of this thing. I seem to be running out of adjustment to early. I'll look it over tomorrow and see how it looks.

 

Graet idea with the turbo crank pullie. I just PMed you by the way. Tim

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I just hit it with the light, 0º on the fly wheel shows up at 4º on my timeing light. That being said, I don't have a reference point to tell me what true TDC is. So now I'm going to mark the flywheel with a TDC mark and use that as a reference point. Sound about right??? Great discussion on this subject guys. Tim

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Okay, this makes sense. What I found to be close to TDC was about -4º. I used the light and if this assumption is correct my timeing was at about 30º advance:eek: . I set the timeing on the 10º advance make, that should actually be 14º. Funny thing it never pinged or rattled like other cars I've driven with way to much advance. After that I re-re-jetted my carb (last re-jet was way to rich). And so the tale continues. Thanks a tonne for the help guys, Tim

 

ok, i just looked, im runing an ea81 flywheel on the er27, same as ea82, as far as marks go. my 20degree mark is punched at 15degrees.

 

id guess if you ran an ea82 flywheel on an ea81 and went by the marks, youd be runing 5 less degrees of timing, right?

 

i marked mine by sticking the ea82 flywheel on the motor, moved it to 20 btdc, took it off, put on the ea81 flywheel, and punched it where the arrow pointed, which was 15btdc.

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