On Tue, 26 Feb 2008, Wrambler242@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > Again, One could cut a new groove in the opposite direction then plug the original with JB weld or silver solder? > I remember having a problem with some 4.0Ls pumping oil up into the dist itself. > IIRC, I experimented by lengthening the groove down below the gear thinking it was meant to keep the oil from crawling up the shaft! I have no idea of why, but I think it worked as I don't recall getting any of those vehicles back for the problem. > Now, in retrospect I have no idea of why that would have worked if it was inded a groove meant to move the oil up that shaft? :] > That was a long time ago. It's a "screw" to pull oil up. It's all large-ish clearances and a long distance so it doesn't move much oil. Some months ago I went through the distribs in my Hornet and Rambler. And I'd been through them before -- so I thought. THIS TIME I really got in there with gun brushes, really got a lot of crud out. THey simply weren't staying oiled. Our cars, and "new" parts, are getting really old. In 1998 I bought a "new" distributor fgor my 304ci V8 and within a few weeks it "spun" -- the whole distributor actually TURNED and whacked timing. When I got it apart it was simply gummed up; an old rebuilt, sat on the shelf, lube hardened. Same thing happened to the distrib in my Rambler. A super thorough cleaning, scraping and wire brushing, then oil, it spun like ball bearings, where before a spin with the fingers woudl go a few turns. Big difference! _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list