When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.
I have a 66 Ford F-250 with a 300 6 cyl, 4-speed and 4.10 gears.
I am having a hard time finding the correct timing so it doesn't ping going up hills. The truck runs strong has good compression (150 lb on all cylinders) and hold 50 lbs of oil pressure..
The engine is stock other than it has a Carter YF carburetor.
You did not post which ignition system it has but when I had this 'pinging' problem I determined it was being caused by the weak springs in the distributor. Anytime above idle the weak springs caused the vacuum advance to fully advance the timing. That problem can be fixed by tuning the distributor, if you can find a distributor machine somewhere. I could not, so I disconnected the vacuum and fooled with the initial timing set. Settled for 10dg initial timing. It's been running like that for almost 250K miles on mechanical advance only...regular gas. Pinging is only a memory.
It has a stock dizzy with points (Dwell is 40 degrees).
I will try unhooking the vacuum advance and setting the initial timing at 10 degrees.
Thank You!
I have a new dist and a pertronic ignitor(that mean there is no points or cond in the distributor) that I'll sell to you,I put a mallory distributor and coil on mine. Let me know if you are interested. Dan
Forget the arbitrary degree numbers and use a vacuum gauge to time it. Disconnect and plug the vac advance, hook a vacuum gauge to a full manifold vacuum source, turn the dizzy until the highest steady vacuum reading is found,back 1-2 hg from there. Adjust the idle mix and speed on the carburetor, reconnect the vac advance, drive and try. If it still pings, back off the dizzy 1 hg and try again. By using this method you will be adjusting the timing to what your engine likes.
I would also install electronic ignition instead of points, I installed the pertronix II with a new matching coil and it smoothed my truck right out. It was a noticeable differance and worth the money. If you go with the pertronix system use the Pertronix II as they upgraded it so the system won't burn out if you leave the key on accidently.
Rezvani's Latest Post-Apocalyptic Monster Is a Ford F-150 Raptor Underneath
Slideshow: Called the Fortress, the 850-horsepower pickup combines Raptor underpinnings with military-inspired features, survival equipment, and a starting price of $285,000.