Richard, Snip I working on the 80 Concord Wagon to fix the front seal, I got lost a bit. Snip Not too unusual Snip I decided to leave off the emission stuff. Snip For a variety of reasons, this may not be the best of idea's but that is another day. Snip Well I did learn that I cannot run a single belt from crank to power steering ove water pump to alternator. No tension on the water pump! Snip This is another one. Snip Plus, cannot figure out where to bolt the alternator exactly that will allow the rest of the timing cover bolts to go into place. Snip This is another one. SNIP Does anyone have a lead on where to find a good pic for the placement of all the front stuff again. SNIP Not sure SNIP And is there an alternative to run all the parts correctly without going back to the emission set up? Snip This is not your problem yet! SNIP It also has AC which is not working at this time and I noticed that I would have to replace the fan pulley with a two belt set up to run the AC later. SNIP This is! First of all there is 12 different unique belt configurations that you can have on the I-6 in 1980 depending on the source of the engine. As mine in my Spirit is from a Pacer I had to verify which configuration I am using. It turns out it is a Six Cylinder with air conditioner, power steering, air pump equipped, and an alternator configured as a Concord, Spirit, AMX and Eagle. Things get interesting if the accessory package changes. The bracketry on your Concord for 1980 assuming you also have power steering mounts the alternator below the air conditioning compressor. The air conditioning compressor drives the Alternator thus the reason for the dual pulley on the air conditioning compressor. If you don't have air conditioning the alternator mounts up where the compressor mounts. You do not have the bracketry to mount the alternator anywhere but where it belongs on your car with A/C. If you don't have the A/C compressor mounted you will not drive the alternator. The belt for the A/C compressor has an idler mounted low that runs on the outside of the belt to apply tension to it and keep it from flopping around. The A/C belt is tightened with an idler and it's bracketry that mounts just above the water pump on the drivers side front of the engine. Assuming you have power steering, the power steering pump mounts on a bracketry assembly that reminds me of a Chinese puzzle that almost defies description and the power steering pump belt also drives the water pump, thus you only need one V groove in that pulley. The dual pulley on the power steering pump mounted just below the surface of the block on its Chinese puzzle bracketry drives the air pump. Thus the air pump can be removed if you feel it is important with out affecting the correct routing of the belts. However as I live in a state with smog inspection and these cars may be come collectable if in nice shape and as I already own 2 1980 AMC cars, a Spirit and an AMX should the smog pump not be on the car and it is for sale. I'm not interested, it won't pass smog and the parts are getting very hard to find. But that is just my reaction to missing smog parts. If you do not have a power steering pump and nothing was said about it, there are idler assemblies apparently installed to replace missing components so you probably are going to have to find a parts car to get the pieces required to run belts on your car as the existing brackets won't get the job done if you leave things off. Sorry about that. I may have some pictures that may help you in this. If you can be more specific. John. _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com