Good Bulletin to see.......evidence of challenges in the past. There appears to have been some investigation when short rotors were introduced and field reports came in based on the Chrysler Tech Bulletin....wish they had put in some results of their testing and established gap & secondary voltage criteria. Would have been helpful data.
Meanwhile testing using Dan's idea to build an extra wide rotor starts with the below rotor which will be dropped into the best lowest eccentric cap found in the dozen or so caps tested so far.
The Echlin Cap #10 had the lowest eccentricity but larger gaps than the 60's rotor/cap tested so the MO3000 rotor with modified rotor tip has a tip that is .007 longer than the standard MO3000 long tip rotor.
The result is that gaps were brought in line with the 60's gaps measured.
Hopefully there will be temps around here in the high 40's to low 50's soon so I can do the test.
http://tinyurl.com/hj64bff
The rotor is crude because it uses common tools.
As far as everyone avoiding the jig building......if you can get a spare distributor and mount your favorite cap and rotor and then spin slowly while exerting side loading to the shaft.....you should be able to hear a hit and avoid the possibility of distributor gear damage when using an extended rotor tip like MO3000 or similar rotor.
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1965 Dart 110k, 225, Carter BBD Super Six, 2 1/4 single exh., sbp manual scarebird front disc, 7 1/4 rear 2.94 sure grip, 14 x 4.5 OEM wheels, 833 OD with hyd. throwout bearing, HEI, electric fan, ram air/heated air, Accusump.
http://plymouthcarclub.com/