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Setting Distributor to #1


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I’m setting up the distributor on a 1974Tii. I have the cam and crank at TDC and TO in the viewing window. Based on all the posts I’ve read I’m at TDC(see pictures TO is blurry). 

 

The distributor body spins but the orange rotor on top dosen’t. Does that mean it’s on #1? There are no markings that I can see on the distributor. 
 

After #1 is set where do the other spark plug wires go?

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4 minutes ago, Mike Nance said:

 

After #1 is set where do the other spark plug wires go?

 

The rotor points at #1 position on your cap, plug the #1 wire on it and then add the wires clockwise in the firing order on your valve cover (1,3,4,2).  Verify that the rockers for #1 cylinder are off cam (closed, compression stroke) and that the "OT" line on the flywheel is even with the squared off back of the viewing hole.

 

Mark92131

1970 BMW 1600 (Nevada)

 

 

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13 minutes ago, Mike Nance said:

There are no markings that I can see on the distributor.

 

When you get ready to fire it, you may need to turn the body of the distributor back and forth to advance it enough to get it started.  Then you can set the timing for 25 degrees BTDC at 2700 RPM (flywheel BB) in the viewing port.  When that is done and the distributor is looked down, you can verify TDC again and make a notch in the lip of the distributor body right under the tip of your rotor.

 

Mark92131

1970 BMW 1600 (Nevada)

 

 

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You can clock the body of the distributor to one of four positions before you do that.

 

Typically, the body of our Bosch distributors is installed so the part number faces forward.  That puts the points on the forward side of the distributor, for easy adjustment.  Yours looks 'backwards' in those photos.  It'd be nice to see distributor photos without the dust cover installed.

 

The original distributor would have been vacuum retarded.  Is that a Bosch #002?

 

 

   

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That is not a dumb question since you have a very weird rotor. You likely have the rotor with a built in limiter.

 

This is the #1 position

 

 

Capture.JPG

 

This is what a normal rotor looks like

 

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Edited by Stevenc22

1976 BMW 2002 Chamonix. My first love.

1972 BMW 2002tii Polaris. My new side piece.

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@Stevenc22, if there is a built in limiter is there another wire that gets connected somewhere? I have the 1.8ohm yellow wire and red/black wire and the black(tachometer)wire identified. Not sure if I have anymore loose wires in the engine bay.

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No you just change the rotor to a standard rotor to remove the limiter. Its a RPM limiter, not a resistor limiter.

1976 BMW 2002 Chamonix. My first love.

1972 BMW 2002tii Polaris. My new side piece.

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