โJul-15-2014 02:01 PM
โJul-28-2014 05:55 AM
โJul-26-2014 07:18 PM
โJul-26-2014 10:32 AM
โJul-25-2014 12:03 PM
โJul-25-2014 11:08 AM
โJul-22-2014 09:05 AM
mrdennis60 wrote:
I had a Pursuit on a 1999 workhorse chassis that had exactly the same problem. I would be driving on the interstate, engine would just quit. Before I could get off the road it would restart. My problem turned out to be the ignition module which was located on a bracket top rear of engine. My research at that time indicated high engine compartment temperature do to design was a contributing factor.
โJul-22-2014 07:51 AM
โJul-20-2014 06:12 PM
โJul-17-2014 10:24 PM
โJul-17-2014 09:03 PM
โJul-17-2014 08:58 PM
Daveinet wrote:
What year Suburban? I would be surprised if a little wobble would hurt the dizzy used in his '95.
โJul-17-2014 10:53 AM
โJul-17-2014 06:44 AM
Gjac wrote:96bounder wrote:How much wobble did the shaft have? Can you check this without removing the distributor?Stim wrote:
My first guess is ignition pick up in distributor.
I recently ran into a Chevrolet Suburban with basically same problem.it to had the 454 engine. owner had already replaced the coil and pickup in the distributor.
After checking-rechecking and checking again we determined problem had to be in distributor
In the end we replaced the entire distributor assembly and it cured the problem. IIRC a complete new dist actually cost about same money as the replacement parts in old one.
After vehicle was repaired I took the old distributor apart and found the shaft was worn just enough to move (wobble around)and come In contact with parts it wasn't supposed to causing an intermittent
short that would cause engine to quit.
โJul-16-2014 07:56 PM
96bounder wrote:How much wobble did the shaft have? Can you check this without removing the distributor?Stim wrote:
My first guess is ignition pick up in distributor.
I recently ran into a Chevrolet Suburban with basically same problem.it to had the 454 engine. owner had already replaced the coil and pickup in the distributor.
After checking-rechecking and checking again we determined problem had to be in distributor
In the end we replaced the entire distributor assembly and it cured the problem. IIRC a complete new dist actually cost about same money as the replacement parts in old one.
After vehicle was repaired I took the old distributor apart and found the shaft was worn just enough to move (wobble around)and come In contact with parts it wasn't supposed to causing an intermittent
short that would cause engine to quit.
โJul-16-2014 07:50 PM
Stim wrote:
My first guess is ignition pick up in distributor.