Timing Light Connections
Moderator: Board Moderators
- Tanz
- Senior Poster
- Posts: 2213
- Joined: Thu May 03, 2007 22:05
- Model: SE
- Colour: Calypso Red
- Year: 1988
- Location: Wolverhampton
Timing Light Connections
Want to check my timing after doing my valve clearances. Have a strobe light which connects to the battery. What is the best way to connect it. Not a problem on cars with batteries in the front. The negative connection is not a problem as any good earth will do. The red positive cable that runs the length of the car could be used I guess? Where does this appear in the engine compartment ? is it at the starter motor? Otherwise I suppose it's easier just to get a long wire and attach it to the positive side of the battery and run it to the front of the car. What is everyone else doing to check their timing 
Cheers, Phil
Never take life seriously, nobody gets out alive anyway!
Never take life seriously, nobody gets out alive anyway!
- robertverhey
- Senior Poster
- Posts: 788
- Joined: Tue Nov 01, 2005 10:54
- Year: 0
- Location: Sydney
- Contact:
Re: Timing Light Connections
Yes under the airbox, on starter motor solenoid, is my feed of choice.
Virtually impossible to see the timing markings without bonnet off
Robert
Virtually impossible to see the timing markings without bonnet off
Robert
Robert Glacier Blue '87 SE
- Tanz
- Senior Poster
- Posts: 2213
- Joined: Thu May 03, 2007 22:05
- Model: SE
- Colour: Calypso Red
- Year: 1988
- Location: Wolverhampton
Re: Timing Light Connections
Thanks for the answers - will give it a go over the week end. Got to be a way of making the bonnet quicker to take off. Every job you do needs the bonnet off and its such a pain to inch those allen screws out. Anyone got a quicker way
Guy at the lotus club - Litchfield has a Elan with a quick release bonnet - tucks the whole thing under his arm while he tells you about the engine
Guy at the lotus club - Litchfield has a Elan with a quick release bonnet - tucks the whole thing under his arm while he tells you about the engine
Cheers, Phil
Never take life seriously, nobody gets out alive anyway!
Never take life seriously, nobody gets out alive anyway!
-
garyexcel
- Junior Poster
- Posts: 80
- Joined: Mon Jun 11, 2007 12:44
- Model: se
- Colour: red
- Year: 1987
- Location: london
Re: Timing Light Connections
Hi Tanz
I have a flexible drive screwdriver with square end just put on appropriate allen head and 2 secounds and its off hope this helps
Gary
I have a flexible drive screwdriver with square end just put on appropriate allen head and 2 secounds and its off hope this helps
Gary
- chrisw2811
- Senior Poster
- Posts: 1806
- Joined: Tue Nov 01, 2005 18:37
- Model: Excel SE
- Colour: Calypso Red
- Year: 1986
- Location: Wellow, Hampshire
Re: Timing Light Connections
Mine's been off & on a good few times and I've found that a bit of copper slip on the threads has made it easy to undo the nuts with fingers once they have been slackened off half a turn.
1986 Excel SE, 1985 FJ1100, 2012 Passat TDI Estate, 2012 Golf TSi, 2010 Mini R56, 1985 Yamaha Salient 1964 Raleigh Runabout 1960 Motobecane 1979 Honda NC50 , '02 Montesa 315R
Well, if I was right all the time I'd get to be predictable!
Well, if I was right all the time I'd get to be predictable!
- robertverhey
- Senior Poster
- Posts: 788
- Joined: Tue Nov 01, 2005 10:54
- Year: 0
- Location: Sydney
- Contact:
Re: Timing Light Connections
Standard bolts and a tube spanner. On and off in a flash
Robert Glacier Blue '87 SE
- Tanz
- Senior Poster
- Posts: 2213
- Joined: Thu May 03, 2007 22:05
- Model: SE
- Colour: Calypso Red
- Year: 1988
- Location: Wolverhampton
Re: Timing Light Connections
Thanks again for the replies,
The previous owner helped me out with one of the allen screws. There is a screw driver perminently wedged into the end of the allen screw. I had a picture somewhere but can't find it
Edited
Just found the old thread complete with pic
http://www.lotusexcel.net/phpbb/viewtop ... rew+driver
Maybe I should wedge another one in the other side
The previous owner helped me out with one of the allen screws. There is a screw driver perminently wedged into the end of the allen screw. I had a picture somewhere but can't find it
Edited
Just found the old thread complete with pic
http://www.lotusexcel.net/phpbb/viewtop ... rew+driver
Cheers, Phil
Never take life seriously, nobody gets out alive anyway!
Never take life seriously, nobody gets out alive anyway!
- Tanz
- Senior Poster
- Posts: 2213
- Joined: Thu May 03, 2007 22:05
- Model: SE
- Colour: Calypso Red
- Year: 1988
- Location: Wolverhampton
Re: Timing Light Connections
Checked the timing yesterday. Had to buy a new timing light as my old one wuz bost.
Connected it as earlier posts ie to the red cable on the starter - worked a treat
Timing was a mile out after doing the valve clearances - close to TDC at hot idle. If I am reading the manual correctly (and it is a bit confusing with this spec and that spec) it should be set at 10 degrees BTDC at hot idle
I have set it at 10 and the performance is much improved especially from a standing start - no flat spot when I put my foot down
Is 10 degrees correct
Connected it as earlier posts ie to the red cable on the starter - worked a treat
Timing was a mile out after doing the valve clearances - close to TDC at hot idle. If I am reading the manual correctly (and it is a bit confusing with this spec and that spec) it should be set at 10 degrees BTDC at hot idle
Is 10 degrees correct
Cheers, Phil
Never take life seriously, nobody gets out alive anyway!
Never take life seriously, nobody gets out alive anyway!
Re: Timing Light Connections
Hi phil
yes 10 degrees BTDC is correct at hot idle
yes 10 degrees BTDC is correct at hot idle