OK, I just went through Tedd Brown's Corvair TBI conversion page. I'm sold. He did a great thing, and it's about 95% right for Rambler sixes (and v8's, for that matter). I've only got two unknowns at this point: * precisely which throttle body to use, that's easiest to adapt physically. This is just junkyard hunting, there's the '87 Ford Tempo body, but I have to figure out if the throttle position sensor is directly GM compatible. The same GM body Tedd used is actually pretty close to right for a 1 bbl downdraft carb. Adapter required, but it's just a flat plate at each end of a tube. * details on how Tedd handled the reluctor for the crank position. First, DIS (GM's wasted-spark) system is overwhelmingly the way to go. I won't bore you with the details, but it's 40KV at all speeds, zero timing jitter, donors are all GM V6's from 87 - 00, all parts are CHEAP (Rambler Mentality). Absolutely no distributor needed, for the 195.6, just plug the hole, it doesn't drive the oil pump. THe catch is of course you need that ECM to control it. THe catch here is that it reads crank position with a notched wheel that is of critical precision. Tedd Brown did a very clever job -- onto the harmonic balancer, he bolted a saw blade that was notched to drive the DIS crank sensor. He then ran the engine with his normal ignition, but used a timing light connected to the DIS system to adjust the crank sensor to the precise location, then using marks made with that test, drilled holes in the face of the harmonic balancer to drive the sensor. He didn't describe the process, or how many holes he had to drill, on or off the car (I suspect on-car, as he was avoiding engine disassembly all along). It's a sweet trick, and the only complication in the whole thing. The clever thing about wasted-spark ignitions (which fire six cylinders with three coils -- two cylinders fire at the same time, the two that are at top-dead-center, one compression stroke, one exhaust stroke). THe "wasted" spark does nothing... but because of this scheme, the ignition doesn't need CAM timing, just CRANK timing! Because for a given pair of cylinders, one of them is at TDC at the same crank position... for a given rotation of the crank, the ignition can't tell which one is at the power stroke, but it doesn't matter -- both get fired. OK the whole world knew this, but I wasn't paying attention until just recently :-) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://list.amc-list.com/pipermail/amc-list-amc-list.com/attachments/20091009/e43ce233/attachment.htm> _______________________________________________ AMC-list mailing list AMC-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://list.amc-list.com/listinfo.cgi/amc-list-amc-list.com