Vanagon EuroVan
Previous messageNext messagePrevious in topicNext in topicPrevious by same authorNext by same authorPrevious page (November 1999, week 2)Back to main VANAGON pageJoin or leave VANAGON (or change settings)ReplyPost a new messageSearchProportional fontNon-proportional font
Date:         Sun, 14 Nov 1999 11:17:16 -0600
Reply-To:     John Rodgers <inua@SCOTT.NET>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         John Rodgers <inua@SCOTT.NET>
Subject:      Re: major problem or minor faux pas?
Comments: To: Animal <terrapin@HALIFAX.COM>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Dave, I have not ever had this particular problem on a VW engine, but I did on my Jeep Wagoneer LTD. The distributor shaft sheared, and it was not obvious, but it got out of time and wouldn't start, backfired, and afterfired a lot. Finally pulled the whole thing out, and that was when I found the problem.

I don't know how the shaft assembly is made up on your machine, but a close look at the entire distributor assembly sounds warranted.

John Rodgers "88GL Driver

Animal wrote:

> Please help, or at least confirm that I'm screwed. > Yesterday I spent the majority of the day trying to get the new > engine in my 80 westy cranked. > It is a 2 liter air-cooled engine that I pulled down to the pistons, > put new rings and heads on it and reassembled. Nothing was done > inside the case and the engine was running when originally pulled for > poor compression. > The problem. It would turn over, spin, try to fire, then backfire and > blow all the vacuum hoses off. > When this would happen I would then put number one back at tdc and > find that the timing had shifted 180 degrees so number three was > firing in the number one spot. > So I pull out the distributor, turn the gear back, put it all back > together and try to crank again. > It spins, tries to fire, then once again blows off the hoses. > So, silly me, decides that if the engine really wants to have three > at on then who am I to argue. > I move all the wires, retime it for what would in theory be number > three but is now in actuality number one, spin it again. > It tries to crank, blows off the hoses and now has shifted 90 degrees. > I'm frustrated and not sure what is going on. > Do I have an expensive paperweight, or is there some way to correct > whatever is going one without having to disassemble the entire engine. > Onward thru the fog > David Conner > terrapin@halifax.com


Back to: Top of message | Previous page | Main VANAGON page

Please note - During the past 17 years of operation, several gigabytes of Vanagon mail messages have been archived. Searching the entire collection will take up to five minutes to complete. Please be patient!


Return to the archives @ gerry.vanagon.com


The vanagon mailing list archives are copyright (c) 1994-2011, and may not be reproduced without the express written permission of the list administrators. Posting messages to this mailing list grants a license to the mailing list administrators to reproduce the message in a compilation, either printed or electronic. All compilations will be not-for-profit, with any excess proceeds going to the Vanagon mailing list.

Any profits from list compilations go exclusively towards the management and operation of the Vanagon mailing list and vanagon mailing list web site.