superj
Well-known member
this is for the guys who have the 4.2 liter inline six cylinder and have swapped their carburetor or done the nutter by-pass.
the factory distributor for the computerized carbureted i6 is not set up for lots of fun because it is designed to work to get lowest emissions possible, at the cost of performance. i am going to show you how to check your current distributor to see what kind of timing advance spring plate you have and then show you how to swap the no fun distributor for an old school none computerized version from an earlier cj that can be bought for 45 bucks plus a refundable core charge of 15 dollars.
here is our fun distributor, part number 30-4691, available from advanced auto parts (and probably others too). it is for a 1980 cj7 with an a 4.2 liter motor.
let me give you some insight to why i did this as you are going to learn i made a mistake in doing this to my poor old 87 wrangler. i bought this old jeep and was told the motor had been changed by the kid who owned it previously. he knew nothing about it as he was not a mechanic and that is why he was swapping me my 87 cherokee straight across for this 87 wrangler. he said the guy told him it had a 4.0 bottom end and that was all he could remember on the motor. i thought ok, means nothing to me because i have only owned 4.0 cherokee and grand cherokees. so he fried the lower end and couldn't find a 4.2 to throw in again. turns out, i was wrong and him changing the bottom end means a whole crazy bunch of power is available to me, if i can unlock it.
what the previous owner had done is stroke this jeep. he put a 4.2 crank and connecting rods into a 4.0 block using 4.0 pistons which translates to a 4.5 liter monster that rides a bit over 200hp. and that is on a carburetor!! with fuel injection and a 4.0 head, you are looking at a hair over 250hp at the crank.
one of the things needed to achieve that 200hp is the proper distributor that gives you the correct advance. the computerized distributor is limited to 8 or 9 degrees of advance because the slots in the spring plate are just not long enough to allow more advance. i have no pic because when i pulled the distributor apart on this cj7, i just forgot to snap one.
but, on with the instructions.
unscrew your distributor cap and set it on the valve cover
pull the rotor (the blue piece in the center of the distributor) and set it in the cap
here is your distributor, be it out of hte vehicle or still in the block, you can do this either way. it is actually easier in the block so you don;t even have to pull your distributor to check what kind of unit you have.
that little star looking piece in the center needs to come off. you just put two screw drivers opposite each other slide it up. don;t forget to undo the screws though or you will be looking at it like i was and wondering what the hell??
once you get the star to move to the top, start being a bit careful as their is a roll pin in it that holds it from spinning on the shaft. that roll pin needs to not drop and get lost or you are going to have a heck of a time driving to the hardware store or autoparts place to find another.
luckily, the little black box on the plate you unscrewed is magnetic so you can stick the roll pin to it and it will be safe.
slide your whole plate and star off and set it somewhere safe
you want to look into the distributor at your spring advance plate
see how this one says 13r and 16r? yours will not say that, it will say 7r and 9r or 8r. (this is the dumb part i warned you about earlier. i never actually opened my distributor up prior to buying the new one. i assumed mine was the older version and now have two of the good distributors)
what you want is purchase the one i showed up above sitting on the box and then open it up and remove everything we just did and swap your plate so the little metal arm is sitting in the 16r slot which will allow you to have the max advance you can get.
once you have purchased your distributor and swapped that plate around you will have to pull your old distributor and replace it with your new hot rod distributor though, this is how you do that.
the factory distributor for the computerized carbureted i6 is not set up for lots of fun because it is designed to work to get lowest emissions possible, at the cost of performance. i am going to show you how to check your current distributor to see what kind of timing advance spring plate you have and then show you how to swap the no fun distributor for an old school none computerized version from an earlier cj that can be bought for 45 bucks plus a refundable core charge of 15 dollars.
here is our fun distributor, part number 30-4691, available from advanced auto parts (and probably others too). it is for a 1980 cj7 with an a 4.2 liter motor.
let me give you some insight to why i did this as you are going to learn i made a mistake in doing this to my poor old 87 wrangler. i bought this old jeep and was told the motor had been changed by the kid who owned it previously. he knew nothing about it as he was not a mechanic and that is why he was swapping me my 87 cherokee straight across for this 87 wrangler. he said the guy told him it had a 4.0 bottom end and that was all he could remember on the motor. i thought ok, means nothing to me because i have only owned 4.0 cherokee and grand cherokees. so he fried the lower end and couldn't find a 4.2 to throw in again. turns out, i was wrong and him changing the bottom end means a whole crazy bunch of power is available to me, if i can unlock it.
what the previous owner had done is stroke this jeep. he put a 4.2 crank and connecting rods into a 4.0 block using 4.0 pistons which translates to a 4.5 liter monster that rides a bit over 200hp. and that is on a carburetor!! with fuel injection and a 4.0 head, you are looking at a hair over 250hp at the crank.
one of the things needed to achieve that 200hp is the proper distributor that gives you the correct advance. the computerized distributor is limited to 8 or 9 degrees of advance because the slots in the spring plate are just not long enough to allow more advance. i have no pic because when i pulled the distributor apart on this cj7, i just forgot to snap one.
unscrew your distributor cap and set it on the valve cover
pull the rotor (the blue piece in the center of the distributor) and set it in the cap
here is your distributor, be it out of hte vehicle or still in the block, you can do this either way. it is actually easier in the block so you don;t even have to pull your distributor to check what kind of unit you have.
that little star looking piece in the center needs to come off. you just put two screw drivers opposite each other slide it up. don;t forget to undo the screws though or you will be looking at it like i was and wondering what the hell??
once you get the star to move to the top, start being a bit careful as their is a roll pin in it that holds it from spinning on the shaft. that roll pin needs to not drop and get lost or you are going to have a heck of a time driving to the hardware store or autoparts place to find another.
luckily, the little black box on the plate you unscrewed is magnetic so you can stick the roll pin to it and it will be safe.
slide your whole plate and star off and set it somewhere safe
you want to look into the distributor at your spring advance plate
see how this one says 13r and 16r? yours will not say that, it will say 7r and 9r or 8r. (this is the dumb part i warned you about earlier. i never actually opened my distributor up prior to buying the new one. i assumed mine was the older version and now have two of the good distributors)
what you want is purchase the one i showed up above sitting on the box and then open it up and remove everything we just did and swap your plate so the little metal arm is sitting in the 16r slot which will allow you to have the max advance you can get.
once you have purchased your distributor and swapped that plate around you will have to pull your old distributor and replace it with your new hot rod distributor though, this is how you do that.