As I stated before, I thought I started this a short time ago, but time flies! After reading the log, it was a year and I noted some issues. Brakes....go figure... Hard to start, no spark, but then it fixed itself, and idled ok but no accelerator pump action.
I drug tools, remote fuel, battery out to the truck, removed the dog house and floor boards...the valve cover sits just above the floor line.
Did you guys know that in a previous life I worked for a place that supported one of Cummins' best customer, MTA and their giant fleet of busses and Cummins also had their engines in busses like MCI, VanHool, Icirus, TEMSA and all those other fugly things. Well, those were not a joy to work on....neither is this! This is not as bad, is fun when running, but I can see that busses were a PITA from the start to wrench on!
Got the stuff hooked up, turned on the f/p, it primed great, tried to start, crank, no-start. Checked spark, nope! Did all the checks, looked at the points, checked voltage at the coil, checked grounds and noticed that the ground circuit was WAY high, like mega ohms high. Did some looking, remember, all this is below floor level and it's kinda dark in there, and noted that the passthrough from the coil to the points looked funky on the inside connection. I could almost pull the condenser wire off. I found that whomever assembled this, didn't line things up properly and the connections on the stud were not making good contact....that'll do it! Did some wrenching with a very small wrench and fat fingers, got thins aligned and in place and just like that, we had very good spark!
Gave it a try again, crank, no start, slight smell of fuel, good spark but no start. Tried some starter in a can, fired right up and died. Gave it a bit more, again, runs until the smelling salts are depleted.
Ended up towing/pushing it to the shop, got the Dodge back in it's home and put the barrier ropes back up.
A bit of background on this. The Museum acquired this back around 2015 ish. It was mostly complete but the radiator was out of it, the cylinder head was just sitting on the block with a couple of bolts in to holt it in place, no wiring at all. I installed the head, adjusted valves, TDC the distributor, made all the connections for oil and vacuum and made a wiring harness/fuse block assembly for it. I have seen this run and drive, I have driven it. I do not recall if I was there for the initial start up, I was still volunteering when I could.
After it was in the shop and I had things situated, like a light and step ladder, disassembly started.
The hardest part of this was the removal of the aluminum intake elbow. Other than that, just awkward due to the carburetor is cast iron, the governor is attached to the carb and the intake elbow wouldn't come off of the carb inlet. Tight squeeze between the linkages!