Quote:
Originally Posted by Hitman
This is not correct as you stated. VW did this only for a handful of years, and not for the reason you stated. It only occurred in the 69-72 VW’s that were 1600cc before they went to the doghouse cooler.
This didn’t happen with the 356/912 distributors. Those cars used different distributors. The distributor rotation has nothing to do with any of this.
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ALL the early VW (1949 to 70 style cooling) and even the early mechanical only 009 (developed by Bosch for VW and installed as stock on some cars and stationary engines) had the retarded cam. After 1971 it wasn't needed. The trick mechanical (no retarded cam lobe) distributor has always been the hard to find Bosch Porsche 010. Yes distributor rotation of a VW/Porsche dizzy used on a VW or Porsche doesn't matter but it won't work right when you spin it backwards. Today you can buy a new ChiCom 009 on ebay for less than $30 cheap enough to play with.
https://www.vwnos.com/0-231-129-010?...caApahEALw_wcB
VW-resource.com wrote: A problem occurs in mismatching the 009 distributor with the doghouse-type oil coolers. Up to and including 1970, the oil cooler was internal to the fan shroud, and this meant that the #3 cylinder (left front) got warm air for it's cooling and therefore ran hotter than the others. So VW altered the timing on the #3 cylinder only -- the cam in the vacuum distributors has #3 cut 2-3 degrees later than the other three cylinders, to reduce the heat load on that cylinder a little. The early 009 distributors also had this feature.
But since 1971 the engines have a doghouse oil cooler that sticks out the front of the fan shroud. After passing through this oil cooler, the hot air is dumped overboard through some extra tinware. The fan itself is a little larger to supply this extra air. You should be able to see/feel this cooler sticking out the front of the fan shroud (front is front of car), slightly left of center. When you're under the car you should be able to see the rectangular air outlet in the tinware just above the bell housing. If the shroud is smooth/straight right across the front of the shroud, you have the earlier type of "in shroud" cooler.
So with the newer type oil cooler, the #3 cylinder now gets nice cool air for cooling, and the retard on #3 is not needed. The double vacuum distributors therefore have no retard on the #3 cylinder (double vacuum distributors were only used on '71 and later engines). VW dropped the retard on 009 distributors about 10 years ago too. So some 009 distributors have the retard, some don't. You need to make sure you have the right one. The only way to tell is to time the engine on #1 as it should be, then look at the timing for #3 (turn the engine 360 degrees). If the points open at the same time, okay; but if the points are opening later (the timing mark is now more about 4-5mm to the right), it's the wrong 009 distributor for a doghouse cooler engine.