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Zedyone_kenobi

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Everything posted by Zedyone_kenobi

  1. How is it all the other interior parts of this car are so clean, and the shift boot is completely destroyed?
  2. I was looking into those, but the prices get big quick. Rob, can you tell us what you were running prior to the hypojets?
  3. Best is really relative. Things to look for.. How easy is removal (for valve adjustments and the like) how much clearance does it provide for your wires and accessories Other than that, you are putting a straight tube in tension. They will all be strong enough to do the job in tension. So strength is about equal to all of them. So get what is easy to work around and what looks good.
  4. That black paint is just delicious.
  5. I wish I knew. Mine burnt off a long time ago.
  6. If you have a 240Z dizzy now, go to http://www.advanceddistributors.com He can totally rebuild your OEM one at a very reasonable price. I have run one for 2 years with zero issues.
  7. Good News! The Mallory LIVES! I just took what Carl said to heart, and my final configuration is this RED wire from Mallory to 12.4V ballast resistor BROWN wire to a chassis ground GREEN wire to negative terminal of the coil. Car started right up! I was able to get 15 deg BTDC at idle and it maxes out at 30 or 31 deg BTDC. The idle feels great, the car fired up cold and stayed running with much more ease at 15 deg BTDC. I was happy to hear her run on the mallory. ONly annoyance now is that the rotor does not point anywhere near where it is suppose to. When I dropped in the Mallory, the detent for the rotor to go on was about 100 degrees out of whack. I was able to just move the wires over, but keeping the OEM clocking of the wires would be great since the number 6 wire is so stretched I can barely reach the dizzy. May have to get some custom wires and make one wire a custom length just for number 6 But for now I am thrilled. Need to make new wire covers and organize everything, but this is great. Cannot wait to feel what 15 deg BTDC static feels like.
  8. I will give it a try at 12.4 volts. I am determined to use my Mallory, since I already bought the recurve kit for it. I have it set to give 16 Deg total advance. 14 static and 16 mechanical will give me about 30 at 2800 rpm if you believe the spring curves they give you. So I have to get this dizzy in my car. I am currently running a custom recurved dizzy form www.advancedistributors.com, and it has been working flawlessly. But it has about 20 deg of mechanical advance, so I have to run about 10 BTDC at idle to avoid pinging (10.5:1 compression on new engine) when I load up the engine hard. I bought this Mallory so I could run about 14 deg BTDC and still keep my engine happy with about 30 deg total. So getting this darn thing to work correctly is mandatory!!!! Webers like a lot of initial advance!!
  9. I will give it a try at 12.4 volts. I am determined to use my Mallory, since I already bought the recurve kit for it. I have it set to give 16 Deg total advance. 14 static and 16 mechanical will give me about 30 at 2800 rpm if you believe the spring curves they give you. So I have to get this dizzy in my car. I am currently running a custom recurved dizzy form www.advancedistributors.com, and it has been working flawlessly. But it has about 20 deg of mechanical advance, so I have to run about 10 BTDC at idle to avoid pinging (10.5:1 compression on new engine) when I load up the engine hard. I bought this Mallory so I could run about 14 deg BTDC and still keep my engine happy with about 30 deg total. So getting this darn thing to work correctly is mandatory!!!! Webers like a lot of initial advance!!
  10. I took my think aluminum heat shield and bought some adhesive thermal tape sold in the V8 Mr. Gasket section of your local auto parts store. They make out to be header wrap. I put that on the bottom of my heat shield in many layers. Carbs seem very happy.
  11. Agreed, the more info you have the better. Also, do you have a wideband?
  12. Okay, I hooked up my other ballast resistor to the car. I ran a jumper wire from the end of the Mallory Ballast which was putting out 12.38 volts (stepped down from 13.9V) to the OEM ballast (which was new as well) Then I measured the voltage on the other end of the OEM ballast to see if there was a corresponding step down. Nope. Voltage INTO Mallory Ballast -> 13.9 V Voltage OUT of Mallory Ballast -> 12.4 V Voltage INTO OEM Ballast -> 12.4 V Voltage OUT of Mallory Ballast -> 12.4 V So what this means i probably need to buy yet another Malloy Ballast resistor.
  13. Carl I sincerely thank you. Mine look nothing like this. In fact the directions that came with the distributor are not the same as the directions that came with the new ignition module. Weird. I have never seen the directions you gave me, but I am going to give it a try with two resistors. I need to get the voltage in the 9 to 10 volt range or else I will cause another ignition module to expire... That gets expensive!
  14. It is common knowledge that Mallory ignition modules do not really care for too much voltage. The instructions that came with my new dizzy say to hook up the red power wire to the 12 volt ignition source. Well on my car that was 13.8 volts... Poof went the first module. Fast forward 90 dollars later with a new ignition module, and the instructions with that replacement module say hook up the red wire to the opposite side of the ballast to the 12 v ignition source. Problem here is my ballast resister puts out like 12.4 volts down from 13.8 This would probably smoke the new resister. I have an extra OEM ballast I can hook up in series to the Mallory ballast that may step down the voltage enough. I may try that tonight Anybody else had this issue.
  15. Man, you read my mind! I was just looking in horror at those sockets on the fender. If a hummingbird feather lands on fender it can dent.
  16. Looks like a wonderful starting point. Your head is screwed on right with the mechanical once over. You had the same exact goals as I did with my car. Buy the nicest driver I could and fix it up while you enjoy it. I think you did very well. Our cars are so much alike, even down to the horrible Yorx AC compressor and torn throttle push rod bushing gasket. IF you have any questions, please ask us. We are here to help and foster any good will toward Z owners anywhere. WELCOME
  17. Great Tid Bit from the Organizer Rich. He asked me for pictures and when I sent him pictures of my Z he replied with this... Hi Stephen, Got it. Pretty car. I like the color and the Minilite/Panasport wheels. Very cool. FYI, I was Managing Editor of Car & Driver in 1971 when we built the 240Z Omega project car. I have lots of stories about that car. I'm also having lunch with my friend Bob Sharp the week before the rally to talk about doing a book on Bob Sharp Racing vs Group 44. Thank you! Never Lift! Rich Neat book that will be worth the reading!
  18. I did not know in California they did not have Shift keys on their keyboards? It is right under the enter key. You should look into it.
  19. 41 days and the Rally gets closer. Did more tuning with the timing last night, but will have to start over when I get my Mallory hooked up correctly at last. I asked about the entry list, and this is the reply I got from Rich Taylor, one of the organizers putting on the rally... We're looking forward to seeing you and Greg. We'll have a final entry list later on, but right now it has some cool cars, including a real C-type Jaguar, Maserati A6GCS, a bunch of Corvettes, Ferraris and Porsches, etc. And two Datsuns, your 240Z and a 260Z, plus a TR-6 and BMW 3.0 CSI. You'll have a lot of fun, we promise! So the entry list looks fun, but my question is WHO IS THE OTHER Z CAR!? It will be great to represent the Z guys out there! 2 Z's among some very pricey sheet metal. That makes me very happy. November will take forever to get here no doubt. I googled the Maserati, and it is just stunning! As is that C type Jag! I will make sure not to touch them! I cannot afford to touch the oil leaking from those cars!
  20. Well my my issue I am trying to solve is just what you describe Lazeum, WOT at 2000 rpm super fast. I am not sure I really need to, but something in me just loves to tinker with these darn things! Under normal driving, the car runs almost flawlessly.
  21. I have not done the runs yet Blue, but I have been doing ALOT of driving. I have not totally eliminated my stumble at transition, but gosh it is close to being gone. I have ordred some larger pump jets though as a trial (expensive trial since they are 10 bucks each! OUCH). I want to get more fuel into the car faster. I noticed that the current jet and spring combination the fuel continues to come out from the accelerator pump for a time after the throttle plates go wide open. When I had the carbs off to install the 32mm chokes, I had to empty the fuel bowls. Well just tilting the carbs do not work on webers like they do no holleys so I just activated the Accelrator pumps via the throttle shaft many times, and when I went WOT I noticed how long the fuel kept streaming out. I thought that getting it more fuel for a shorter time period may help out the hole when I just go WOT very quickly. I cannot slam open the throttles on my car at low rpm without a brief pause and the taking off quickly. There is definitely a lean spot then it goes back to about 13:1ish. This is what I am thinking is happening. I am going wide open on the throttle plates when the volume of air being taken in by the engine is relatively low, so the carb main circuit is not sensing enough flow through the venturi to draw fuel up the main jet and into the etubes and then into the main venturi. I am currently running 40 pump jets. I bought 50 pump jets. This will dispense the same amount of fuel but in a shorter amount of time. This could have two results... I could dump too much and it will not atomize and may pool up in the manifold and make the instant WOT hole much worse. Or it will get the fuel it needs and will fill the void left by going to instant WOT at lower gears. It is a calculated risk. I bought 2 sizes up on the pump jet (going with a 50 vs a 45) so I could get a more drastic delta. If it gets much worse I will know I went perhaps the wrong way. the beauty of the webers design is to be able to do so much tuning so quickly without removing the carbs. They were made to work on, which gives me a smile each and every time I take them apart. I cannot fathom a more user friendly design.
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