In an effort to space the timing wheel away from the engine, I had removed it, and replaced it - It has a pair of alignment bolts exactly 180 degrees apart, so I put it on 180 degrees out. So every time the engine wanted to fire, it fired the wrong pair of cylinders on the wrong part of the timing cycle.
As well as having a low output from the VR sensor.
That low output was fixed by the added spacer that allowed the centre of the tip of the sensor to run over the centre teeth of the timing wheel, and reducing the gap of the sensor by resting it on a piece of cardboard on top of the timing wheel while adjusting the fixing bolts.
I also found as a result of picking away at the end of a damaged Ford Fiesta VR sensor (where it was hit by the timing wheel for a while) that it uses a (smashed) 7mm button magnet on the tip of the sensor.
This was replaced with a stack of 5mmx1mm neodymium magnets, effectively reducing the diameter of the tip of the sensor and sharpening up its response. I epoxied the magnets in to place.
It also showed me that these Ford sensors have no directionality to their operation - the sensitive area of the tip of the sensor is a circle.
And finally the engine started.
But not before the carburettor filled the exhaust with so much unburnt fuel that I got a jet of flame about 2 feet long coming out of the exhaust when it fired.
Tomorrow I will get out the timing gun and start going through the setup and tuning - I took a video of the engine running for the first time using the UaEFI as the ignition controller.Statistics: Posted by mikedjames — Thu Oct 09, 2025 7:24 pm
]]>