mercilessltd
+1y
Truck ('87 B2200 with 2.0L motor swapped) has been driving beautifully. Thursday morning, less than a quarter mile from work, I was exiting the interstate. I pushed in the clutch to slow down during the climb on the ramp. When I looked at my gauges to see what gear to be in, I noticed my dash lights were on and 0 RPMs. No amount of starting or clutch-popping would even make the tach move.
I knew this meant no fire, since the tach runs off of the coil. I went through the usual checklist (since I had done a tune-up last Saturday night). Coil was showing good resistance. Checked the coil wire and it was showing continuity. I did the screwdriver spark test from first plug, and it magically started. Got totally confused. (This was the only time it has fired up. Once.)
Decided to check the distributor cap and rotor. Checked continuity, swapped out for old parts, still nothing. So I left the cap off, but left the rotor on. Lo and behold, the distributor is not turning. I checked the timing belt, and it's still intact and tight.
I've seen quite a few people have issues with distributors on here, but none have I seen (or found with search) where it just quit turning. It's still secured in there; it's not loose at all.
A few questions:
- Has anyone ever experienced this?
- Is this something you all would trust from a junkyard pull (I've seen a few guys on here do that), or should I invest in a new one?
- If I do pull from a junkyard, anything in particular I should know?
- Will a 2.2L distributor work in a 2.0L? I have one from the original engine, but I thought they were different.
- I know the procedure of installing and removing the same one for timing, but when installing a "new" one, what should I do? Grease what? Replace o-rings (what size/part)?
- I just checked RockAuto and they list two. Although they look the same, one says "Mitsubishi Type." I assume all '87 2.0L engines are Mitsubishi Types?