I can tell you what I've done... For 232/258's, I've mostly gone to late-70's Duraspark stuff. They've been absolutely reliable. They use funny Ford connectors, but you can get those froma junkyard, anything with a six Duraspark from the 70's and 80's, car or truck. The wiring is easy enough. THe distributors you get can cheap rebuilts. Be warned, a lot of them have sat around and the lube in them is dried up... I'm finding it worthwhile to complete disassemble -- new or used! -- distributors, gun-brushing the long journal, wire-brushing the oil groove, lube and reassemble. I had a rebuilt once so sticky it spun in the block about 30 degrees and stopped the motor! But the Rambler Mentality route -- which I think I would do today instead of a Duraspark conversion -- is use a points distrib, full teardown and lube, and use a Pertronix kit and epoxy coil. Simply because it's neater; no box on the firewall or fender. Both the Duraspark and Pertronix are better-than-points, but not high-output. For a stock motor, that's MORE than enough. I have a Duraspark II on my Classic wagon (which consists of an expensive cap and rotor, an adapter, all Standard parts, plus a junkyard "TFI" coil). That's near-HEI output and easy to add to an existing setup. But I think the hot cheap setup is a junkyard Ford TFI coil on a Pertronix in a points distributor. You need an external resistor, but most stock coil brackets have a littl tab for one. If you are running over 5000 rpm, or high performance (turbo, high compression, big cam, etc) HEI or multiple-spark might be warrented, but it's a waste -- and invites arcover in a street car, where the wires get dirty and exposed to extreme voltages found in an HEI setup -- and be more trouble than it's worth. Durasprk and Pertronix are essentially "points replacements" -- plus they don't weat out the distributor (rubbing block). Set timing once, and forget. They are 100% reliable -- it's not the 70's any more, modern electronics are fine under the hood. They didn't used to be, but are now. On Wed, Mar 18, 2009 at 6:48 PM, Jerry Casper <gremlingts@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Ok, been tinkering with my new Hornet hoopdee, and it's running better each time I go under the hood. Tonight, after I got home, I checked the vac advance using direct engine vacuum...the timing mark never moved off 8 BTDC at idle. I think it's runninng on ported vacuum, I feel nothing from the hose coming from the carb. But with it direct, it still doesn't work, so I'm sure it's dead. > > So, the next question is, should I bother repairing it, or just replace the whole distributor with a better version? I was thinking of the GM HEI conversion, I already have a distributor done (somewhere ), but I think I'd rather do a more Plug-n-Play if I can, I don't want to be cutting and splicing wires to get it to work right now, plus a new coil, etc. May have to ANYWAY, but would rather have the P&P option to just drop something in for now and get it working better. > > Any suggestions that won't cost me a fortune? Will a Jeep 4.0 distributor work, or would I need to go back to the older 4.2 engines? Thanks, > > Jerry in Virginia > > > > > -------------- next part -------------- > An HTML attachment was scrubbed... > URL: http://splatter.wps.com/pipermail/amc-list/attachments/20090318/5683e95d/attachment.htm > _______________________________________________ > Amc-list mailing list > Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx > http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list > -- All your arguments are invalid. Enjoy your unstable system. _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list