quote:
Originally posted by SIG:
The spark plugs are dark black and clearly indicate that there is something wrong with the engine. This afternoon I have started replacing the ignition wires and found them quite degraded (high resistance and partially disconnected). I removed one of the valve covers and found following number on the head
"E2ZM 6049 A3". Does this help identifying the correct spark plug type? Thanks for any help.
Brgds
Hartwig
It sure does. They are "A3" heads. That's what I am using.
I found that the NGK BP5ES plug runs nicely. I would recommend that you try a set.
You COULD cross that number over to another brand and use their equivelent.
I think that it is in the Champion F11y heat range? Maybe a little hotter? In US production that would be for a 2v 351w vs a 4v 351w which would be colder and be a F9y.
I have found that this A3 head needs to run a hotter plug then the equivalent IRON head would need. Especially with the Webers.
If that is a Holley 750cfm double pump, mechanical secondary carb, Holley number 4779, then it has a very heavy idle and certainly would benefit from using this NGK plug.
To index the plugs, the tip of the electrode needs to point at the intake valve.
You need a spark plug shim assortment. I think three different sizes come in the kit from Moroso.
Mark the plug on the outside porcelen where the tip of the electrode is pointing with a black felt tip marker pen. Screw the plug in and snug it up.
Record where it is pointing if it isn't pointing at the intake valve.
Remove it and place one of the thinest shims on the plug first and reinstall it. Notice that you black mark has moved. Keep doing this until that mark points at the valve.
The cylinder head that you have, the "A3", is sensitive to this indexing and will give you positive results. It's worth the effort.
Check the float levels in the carb. With the engine running, fuel should be at the bottom edge of the examination port opening and should not run out.
The intake manifold that you have (I know which one it is) was not angle cut from Ford Motorsport, but some people mill the top of the carburetor pad to 17 degrees because they are going to use it in a car like a Mustang and the engine in that car (as well as most other US production vehicles) is set in at an angle.
It is important that the carb sits level. If your carb is not sitting level, then I guaranty that the float levels are wrong and that could be contributing to an idle mixture that is too rich.
With the Holley double pumper series of carburetors, the air / fuel ratio of the idle circuit is already built into it. When you turn the "idle adjustment" screws, you are not changing that ratio, you are changing the VOLUME of atomized mixture the engine is getting at idle.
Those carburetors have a VERY HEAVY idle and the fumes from the exhaust normally will smart you eyes (make them burn).
They are "race calibrated" carburetors and are set that way at the factory because they presume the engine will be run with race headers that tend to lean out the carburetor right off of idle, at sudden throttle opening.
That carburetor all by itself can blacken the plugs.
This all goes back to getting the heat range of the spark plugs right. When you have those "settings" correct, that is an exceptional engine. It makes power.