G_Body_Man wrote:
NOHOME wrote:
I think you have a bit or work to do on basic engine diagnosis.
Have you pulled the plugs one at a time to see if one makes no difference when pulled?
Have you done a compression test on all cylinders?
Have you stuck a vacuum gauge on the engine? The vacuum gauge is the least appreciated tool that I know of and yet one of the most informative when it comes to telling you how healthy an engine is.
Here is a two second search on how to use one. Couple of thousand more hits that I did not look at.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SdlNwm8OHco
I really like leakdown testers, but not strictly necessary if you have compression.
Rather than asking open ended broad questions, why not post up your plan of attack to deal with any one problem and ask for help or validation on that one issue?
It needs plugs and wires anyways, so I'll do those and see if it runs more smoothly. I'll probably do a compression test while I'm at it.
Do exactly what Nohome suggested. Test the spark as he said before throwing those on the car away. You gather up those mostly free or borrowed tools and spend an afternoon learning a lot about the engine.
As far as cam lobes, all you really need to do is pull the valve covers and watch them dance under cranking (leave the coil wire off so it won't fire).
Valve cover gaskets? Please, that's like $10 and twenty minutes.
Rust? Yeah, you're in Canada and you have no money. Everything you are going to be able to get will have rust.
When I was your age, I bought an 81 Camaro with a swapped IN (!!!) 305/TH350. It used to be a four speed car, so it still had a clutch pedal that just wasn't connected to anything. It was painted four different colors, and all of the springs were broken and/or sagging so it sat all weird. When I bought it, it had a super-trick 4-7 swap, except the guy just swapped the wires, so it was running on six. When I brought it home and parked in my uphill driveway, it peed all of the gasoline out from the tank forward. It had no headliner, just a cloth flag of a wizard with lightening bolts stapled to the cardboard. The seats and steering wheel were red, and the dash and door panels were black.
I can't even remember all of the other crap that was wrong with it. I also didn't have GRM. Just a basic set of tools. TunaDad would say "I dunno, it sounds like it's broken", so learning was tough.
Point is this. You have GRM on your side, and a running, driving car that you already paid for. You already have a friend and the parts for a repair to the only rust on the car which actually matters. Your engine runs, but not well. This is the PERFECT time for you to learn how to test for spark, how to use a timing light, a vacuum gauge, how to tune a carb, how to change basic parts, and get some stuff humming.
You're going to be fine. If you keep buying and selling, looking for the perfect car, you're going to be broke and irritated. Every car at this price point is going to be a mess. It sounds like you have a good one. Fix your junk and drive it. We're with you.