425 issues
425 issues
A friend has a Starfire w. 425 4 bbl that has high-ish miles on it getting tired perhaps, has a "rattle" at cruise speed (not accelerating). Do these have a plastic cam gear? loose chain? could have jumped time? maybe a poor gas spark knock (10.5 : 1 comp ratio?). Any speculation as to what may be going on?.
I would go with "maybe a poor gas spark knock (10.5 : 1 comp ratio?)". Make sure he is using at a minimum 91-93 octane.
The first thing to check is dwell and timing. If they are off that by itself could cause spark knock.
If those are OK. Let them try to get the highest octane available on a nearly empty tank. Some places sell racing gas. Make sure to add enough so that at least 80% of the fuel is very high octane.
See if it goes away. If that's the case and he can't get better fuel than he is using, then he could back off the timing from 7.5BTDC to 5BTDC with the result in less pinging and slightly less power. Perhaps the knock would go away.
There is also a chance it's his idle speed mixture is set too lean. If everything else doesn't seem to help, let me know and I'll tell you how to adjust the idle mixture.
You don't really hear the timing chain slapping at speed. If it jumped a tooth, it would run terribly and a small rattle at speed would be the least of his problems.
The first thing to check is dwell and timing. If they are off that by itself could cause spark knock.
If those are OK. Let them try to get the highest octane available on a nearly empty tank. Some places sell racing gas. Make sure to add enough so that at least 80% of the fuel is very high octane.
See if it goes away. If that's the case and he can't get better fuel than he is using, then he could back off the timing from 7.5BTDC to 5BTDC with the result in less pinging and slightly less power. Perhaps the knock would go away.
There is also a chance it's his idle speed mixture is set too lean. If everything else doesn't seem to help, let me know and I'll tell you how to adjust the idle mixture.
You don't really hear the timing chain slapping at speed. If it jumped a tooth, it would run terribly and a small rattle at speed would be the least of his problems.
Last edited by sysmg; Dec 21, 2022 at 08:45 AM.
Yes good to try that stuff first, though the fact that it is happening at steady cruise makes me wonder.
I'll check on the gas he's using.
Curious: do 425s have a plastic or fiber timing gear? If so when do they typically wear to point of needing replaced?
I'll check on the gas he's using.
Curious: do 425s have a plastic or fiber timing gear? If so when do they typically wear to point of needing replaced?
The idle screws only control the mixture at idle.
The mixture at cruise is controlled by the jets.
The mixture may indeed be lean at cruise if ethanol laced fuel is being used.
It has been recommended that the carb be re-jetted one or two steps larger when using ethanol gas.
The mixture at cruise is controlled by the jets.
The mixture may indeed be lean at cruise if ethanol laced fuel is being used.
It has been recommended that the carb be re-jetted one or two steps larger when using ethanol gas.
That said, they should be replaced, but on an old tired motor with nothing done to it, I would wait until at least a partial rebuild to replace it. It's not worth fixing if you are not rebuilding the original heads, and replacing, camshaft, lifters and the rest of the valve train. Especially if you don't have the money to invest.
Yes plastic teeth. If the gear is original I'd change it now. Teeth will break off and plug the oil pump intake or worse yet a valve and piston get introduced to one another on a HC motor if it jumps. Pinging due to low fuel quality will damage the pistons.
Good luck!!!
Good luck!!!
It’s easy enough to check timing chain wear with little tear down work.
Remove the distributor cap. Slowly rotate the engine in a clockwise direction until the timing marks read zero. If you go past zero, rotate the engine in a clockwise direction until they line up.
Once they are lined up, slowly rotate the engine counterclockwise until you see the rotor move, then stop. Read the timing marks, whatever the marks read is the amount of slop in the chain. If it’s more than 5-10 degrees (I don’t recall the actual spec) I’d replace it.
Remove the distributor cap. Slowly rotate the engine in a clockwise direction until the timing marks read zero. If you go past zero, rotate the engine in a clockwise direction until they line up.
Once they are lined up, slowly rotate the engine counterclockwise until you see the rotor move, then stop. Read the timing marks, whatever the marks read is the amount of slop in the chain. If it’s more than 5-10 degrees (I don’t recall the actual spec) I’d replace it.
I don't think any of us can be much help to your friend without at least getting a better description of the sound, e.g. does it sound like a coffee can full of marbles? A spray paint rattle can? A baby's rattle? A rattlesnake?
See if he can narrow it down a little for us.
Another possible culprit would be old fuel (as in at least one year) .
When a car sits for a long time and is used rarely the fuel in the tank deteriorates.
The lighter molecules in the gasoline evaporate first. Lowering the octane.
Eventually, it deteriorates into something resembling kerosine.
The use of fuel stabilizers helps slow this process.
When a car sits for a long time and is used rarely the fuel in the tank deteriorates.
The lighter molecules in the gasoline evaporate first. Lowering the octane.
Eventually, it deteriorates into something resembling kerosine.
The use of fuel stabilizers helps slow this process.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
steve walker
Big Blocks
9
Dec 17, 2019 12:32 PM



