It was running fairly well, though occasionally missing (on #3, I think) and it had a lag (basically almost stalling) at low RPM and intermittent bucking. I guessed that it had something to do with fuel getting into the carbs. So...
I replaced plugs, plug wires, distributor, rotor (the one I got to replace the old is quite 'sloppy'...is that normal?), points, condensers. I put a new fuel filter in (though not one 'made for' the car...the one I got from Ricambi was too big for the hoses...so I grabbed a cheapo see-thru one from O'Reilly). Also, I tested the coil and it seemed like it was out of spec for resistance, so I put a new one in.
Of course, now it's really bad.
It seems to run nearly perfectly on the cold points, but when it warms up things go south. At 3000RPM, it starts skipping and missing badly. I stopped at a station when it started happening and then she wouldn't start...until it cooled down somewhat (though not all the way down to 'cold'). After getting it started I could drive enough to get it home, but now I don't know where to begin to diagnose what I did that was so wrong.
NOTE: I'm a newbie mechanic...been years since I worked on my '77 Toyota pickup!
- Could it be the points? This seems like the most likely culprit, but I've checked the gaps twice...I have a dwell meter but I don't know how to hook it up and don't know what I'd do with the information, even if I did get it working. Also, I couldn't be absolutely sure which were the cold and which were the running points...which one is closest to the front of the car?
Could it be the cheapo fuel filter? Too much back-pressure or something?
Could it be the sloppy rotor? I put it in before I did the points, coil and plug wires and the car ran ok, but unchanged from the same low RPM bucking and missing
Help!