Jump to content

Issues with my 1939 Plymouth


Paul Roa

Recommended Posts

good morning to all, nice info you all have here, thanks! I recently went out of the box of Chevrolet and purchased a 1939 Plymouth Convertible that has a 1946 218 P15 motor in it. the owner from Washington said it ran fine, it gets delivered and the car is dead, the key was on. ok so we push it into garage. we try to fire up the 6 volt system but battery is dead. tried to charge it no luck, bought a new one from napa. pulling back the choke the car fired up after several attempts cool we take for drive but when we got home that was it, the car didn't fire up again. with advice from others i did the following:
replaced battery cables and went to 0 size. negative goes to starter and positive to frame
replaced 6 volt coil with positive going to distributor and negative going to ignition
had started checked, its good
rebuilt carburetor
replaced points and condenser

if i put key on, using my test light i get a light on ignition, on + side of coil, on cable leading to distributor but i get no spark on #1
the spark plugs do look worn out so i am thinking of going to napa ordering spark plugs, rotor and rotor cap plus spark plug cables and see if that resolves issue
maybe a bad distributor? i had read the Poor Man’s Distributor Test Bench but the part after marking the TDC (firing up the engine) i cant proceed due to engine not firing up

any suggestions? forgive my ignorance i am trying to learn rather than just taking the car into shop. thanks in advanced

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Check the wire from the coil, where it enters the distributor. This wire cannot access ground. Look for rubber or fiber isolators at the distributor housing to ensure it is not

touching ground. Are all the wires inside the distributor in place?  Can you verify an arc/spark at the points when you turn the engine over?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Paul Roa said:

good morning to all, nice info you all have here, thanks! I recently went out of the box of Chevrolet and purchased a 1939 Plymouth Convertible that has a 1946 218 P15 motor in it. the owner from Washington said it ran fine, it gets delivered and the car is dead, the key was on. ok so we push it into garage. we try to fire up the 6 volt system but battery is dead. tried to charge it no luck, bought a new one from napa. pulling back the choke the car fired up after several attempts cool we take for drive but when we got home that was it, the car didn't fire up again. with advice from others i did the following:
replaced battery cables and went to 0 size. negative goes to starter and positive to frame
replaced 6 volt coil with positive going to distributor and negative going to ignition
had started checked, its good
rebuilt carburetor
replaced points and condenser

if i put key on, using my test light i get a light on ignition, on + side of coil, on cable leading to distributor but i get no spark on #1
the spark plugs do look worn out so i am thinking of going to napa ordering spark plugs, rotor and rotor cap plus spark plug cables and see if that resolves issue
maybe a bad distributor? i had read the Poor Man’s Distributor Test Bench but the part after marking the TDC (firing up the engine) i cant proceed due to engine not firing up

any suggestions? forgive my ignorance i am trying to learn rather than just taking the car into shop. thanks in advanced

This may just be a personal bais of mine,but if the plugs are Champion,throw them at someone you don't like,and replace them with practically any other brand. I mostly use AC ,but that is primarily for convenience. I am not saying they are better than any plug except for Champion.

I will hurt anyone that ever puts a Champion plug in any of my cars. I am serious about this.

 

BTW,I want to congradulate you on having the courage to get rid of the Chevy and enter the world of Mopar. Not only that,but you jumped in with both feet by buying a very rare Mopar on top of it. I like hot rods more than restored cars,but cars like your 39 convertible are too rare to modify and I hope you try to keep it reasonably stock. Do what you have to do to make it safe and reliable,and then just enjoy the damn thing.

Edited by knuckleharley
  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Is it a pea green or dark blue 39 convert?

A friend of mine had both in Seattle.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If you order new tune up parts remember to provide the distributor number to whoever you get them from as there are differences over the years. I had a problem before I found that out. Some caps are taller than  others it seems and creates a large gap from the rotor to the cap contacts.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Wow, a 1939 Plymouth convertible, welcome to the forum. Now, please don't get upset with me. While you haven't mentioned your background, I  assume you have mechanical experience as you mentioned having rebuilt the carburetor.. If the car started after replacing the battery, and not since the work you've summarized,I would think you should still see spark at number 1 cylinder...this is the part that I hesitate to mention - the point gap in the distributor must be set at least approximately correct and the points must both close then open to obtain spark..again, forgive me if I've insulted you

Edited by T120
correction
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, T120 said:

Wow, a 1939 Plymouth convertible, welcome to the forum. Now, please don't get upset with me. While you haven't mentioned your background, I  assume you have mechanical experience as you mentioned having rebuilt the carburetor.. If the car started after replacing the battery, and not since the work you've summarized,I would think you should still see spark at number 1 cylinder...this is the part that I hesitate to mention - the point gap in the distributor must be set at least approximately correct and the points must both close then open to obtain spark..again, forgive me if I've insulted you

no insult sir, one needs to take constructive wording to learn and i want to learn, i will check the points...

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

19 minutes ago, Paul Roa said:

no insult sir, one needs to take constructive wording to learn and i want to learn, i will check the points...

Sometimes a problem can be due to something a person overlooks.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Set the gap to 18 on the points better to be a little under then over.  I have a 39 Desoto Sedan. These late 30's car were the last of the Art deco style.

 

I have lots of cross reference catalogs for your car. I live Near Philadelphia. So I quess you do not get any time to come to MECA as we call it but the Hershey fall swap meet.  I have been going for over 32 years and it is still impressive.

 

Write to me at desoto1939@ol.com

 

Rich Hartung

Link to comment
Share on other sites

These items addressed below may not be your problem, however should be looked at closely to ensure.

 

Photo 1: shows the rubber isolator that needs to be in place at the distributor housing. It also shows a very bad wire with exposed wire strands. This is unacceptable and any wire that looks like this needs to be replaced.

 

Photo 2: Red arrows again point to the rubber isolator (important). Orange circles point out various fasteners that need to be secured tight.  Find them all, check them for tight. Don't overdo it with too much torque. The green arrows point to internal wires that need to be properly shielded, unable to allow voltage to jump to ground. Any seen as questionable, replace.  

 

You mentioned replacing points. Many a beginner (including me) have set them wrong and an engine won't start. The points gap needs to be adjusted when the points are fully opened.  The points lift-arm is to be at the apex of the points cam. The correct spec will get your dwell close when you have new points installed. Not later, when adjustments are made with worn points. Then a dwell meter really proves its value.

 

The key to good troubleshooting is really understanding how the various systems work. Why they all work together and what they do. Best to source some old vintage books on automotive technical theory and read, read, read.  Lights start to come on. Eventually you'll have a long string of lights, like a run of outdoor Christmas lights inside your brain. All working together. You'll be firing on all cylinders, so to speak!

 

Screen Shot 2021-02-03 at 2.29.56 PM.png

 

Screen Shot 2021-02-03 at 2.30.21 PM.png

Edited by keithb7
  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Paul,

Once you determine you have spark at the points, static time the motor (read up on the process in our technical area above).

Static Timing is setting the Ignition timing with the motor not running. Piston #1 must be at Top Dead Center in order to start with.

Remove the Coil Wire (Center of the Dis. Cap and hold it near a ground, loosen the distributor and rotate the distributor until a spark jumps at the wire/ground)

Now you are ready to start the motor and use a timing light to dial it in more.  By the way the key must be turned on when doing the above

don't get bit

It sounds like the timing got knocked off when you put new points in. therefore no spark at #1 when it needs to be there.

Good Luck.

Tom

Edited by Tom Skinner
Link to comment
Share on other sites

21 hours ago, keithb7 said:

These items addressed below may not be your problem, however should be looked at closely to ensure.

 

Photo 1: shows the rubber isolator that needs to be in place at the distributor housing. It also shows a very bad wire with exposed wire strands. This is unacceptable and any wire that looks like this needs to be replaced.

 

Photo 2: Red arrows again point to the rubber isolator (important). Orange circles point out various fasteners that need to be secured tight.  Find them all, check them for tight. Don't overdo it with too much torque. The green arrows point to internal wires that need to be properly shielded, unable to allow voltage to jump to ground. Any seen as questionable, replace.  

 

You mentioned replacing points. Many a beginner (including me) have set them wrong and an engine won't start. The points gap needs to be adjusted when the points are fully opened.  The points lift-arm is to be at the apex of the points cam. The correct spec will get your dwell close when you have new points installed. Not later, when adjustments are made with worn points. Then a dwell meter really proves its value.

 

The key to good troubleshooting is really understanding how the various systems work. Why they all work together and what they do. Best to source some old vintage books on automotive technical theory and read, read, read.  Lights start to come on. Eventually you'll have a long string of lights, like a run of outdoor Christmas lights inside your brain. All working together. You'll be firing on all cylinders, so to speak!

 

Screen Shot 2021-02-03 at 2.29.56 PM.png

 

Screen Shot 2021-02-03 at 2.30.21 PM.png

 

sir enclosed is my current setup...i see already the main wire is no good. however your set up looks different . i am to compare them now. thanks

IMG_2311.JPG

Link to comment
Share on other sites

20 hours ago, Tom Skinner said:

Paul,

Once you determine you have spark at the points, static time the motor (read up on the process in our technical area above).

Static Timing is setting the Ignition timing with the motor not running. Piston #1 must be at Top Dead Center in order to start with.

Remove the Coil Wire (Center of the Dis. Cap and hold it near a ground, loosen the distributor and rotate the distributor until a spark jumps at the wire/ground)

Now you are ready to start the motor and use a timing light to dial it in more.  By the way the key must be turned on when doing the above

don't get bit

It sounds like the timing got knocked off when you put new points in. therefore no spark at #1 when it needs to be there.

Good Luck.

Tom

agreed...my son put the points on. maybe an oversite. but this is how we learn. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have taken a picture of a NOS Autolite Breaker Plate IGS 3004A  This is the same plate used inyour 39 Plymouth and also used inmy 39 Desoto.

As mentioned before I think some of the wire are not correct look at the pictures.

 

rich Hartung    Desoto1939@aol.com

 

thumbnail?appid=aolwebmail&size=400w

p 1.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Your Plymouth is VERY NICE..........and Merles comment about the condenser wire is a good pick............guard those square headlights, they lenses are very hard to find.....andyd.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

over here inthe state the lens and the headlight rings can be found because the Plymouth has the most sales of the 39 Cars.  What gets hard is the 39 Desoto and Chrylser. The 39 dodge is not to bad but the other two are getting harder and harder to get NOS and original parts.

 

Rich Hartung

Desoto1939@aol.com

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, Paul Roa said:

 

 

IMG_2311.JPG

 

 

Can you loosen the clamp on the capacitor and slide it slightly forward? To give a little more free wire to move away from the points?

Looking at your engine the main coil HT lead appears old and crispy. I'd replace it. It does not match the age of the spark plug wires.

Edited by keithb7
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Further to what keith just said, I enlarged the photo you posted  of your distributor innards ,it appears to me that the points will never show open, ( spark occurs when they open),because there appears to be a short circuit where that condenser is attached to the movable contact and the jumper wire (stationary contact)...Which is chassis ground.

Edited by T120
added - chassis ground
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.

Terms of Use