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Old 11-20-2013, 10:02 AM
RAII 4-speed RAII 4-speed is offline
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Default Dist tag

Attached is a picture of the tag on my dist.
I can not find this number in my research.
can anyone help?
THANKS





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Old 11-20-2013, 10:36 AM
John V. John V. is offline
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1111040 was the Distributor used with the Transistorized Ignition option for a 326 engine in the Tempest line-up and the 421 in the big cars in '64.

The first application for it was T.I. on the '63 421 engines but with the 4E4 ('64, May 4) date code, looks like yours was from a '64 application.

The '64 GTO and '64 389 big cars used the 1111047 Distributor with T.I., it had a slightly slower advance spec vs. the 1111040 near as I can tell.

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Old 11-20-2013, 10:53 AM
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My car is all original and never rebuilt or restored.
it is a 1965 GTO tri power 4-speed convertible.
My car was built in 1964 and was built in California
AND Yes it does have TI.

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Old 11-20-2013, 02:02 PM
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I see a non original heater hose clamp.....time to sell me your modified, no-longer-original car 'on the cheap'. I'll strip it, paint it resale red, install an LS engine, and a set of 22" rims. Oh yeah, and a thumpin' stereo system. Or, I guess you could replace the hose clamp......Nah..........

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Old 11-20-2013, 03:00 PM
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I can't say that your Distributor couldn't be original, just that it seems odd based on what I can uncover.

Are you the original owner? If not, I might suspect that this Dist was installed as a Service Replacement or salvage yard swap somewhere along the way if the original failed.

Or it may have been an engine dress out error.

When was your GTO final assembled? I've never paid attention to the date coding of misc engine parts, but I suspect it would be unusual for an early May '64 dated Dist to be installed in a '65, no matter when built.

This would be especially true if the 1111040 had no specified usage for '65, in which case, typically, excess parts would have been sent to the Parts Warehouse for Service Replacement use at the end of the Model Year, which would have been late July, early Aug after '64 production ended, no reason to keep the 1111040 at the assembly plant if it was not to be used in '65..

The '66 MPC indicates no usage for the 1111040 for '65 but that could be a consequence of a p/n supersedure.

Do you have the AMA specs for '65? Perhaps the early '65 Dist. p/ns will be listed in that document and maybe the 1111040 will be listed. If it had any '65 usage, there would be a possibility that it was installed in your engine on purpose (even if by engineering approved deviation) or by mistake. As long as the Dist was "in the building", anything is possible.

Also check the Shop Manual, I think the Dist p/ns are listed there in the electrical specs.

It is conceivable that the 1111040 was designated for the GTO Tri-Power w/ TI in '65. As I mentioned, it has quicker advance specs than the 1111047, the '65 GTO TP/TI Dist shown for SR in the MPC.

The date coding is the most troubling to my eye but the TI option was not very common, so perhaps not so odd as compared to standard points Dists that presumably had a lot more inventory turnover.

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Old 11-20-2013, 06:54 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by John V. View Post
I can't say that your Distributor couldn't be original, just that it seems odd based on what I can uncover.

Are you the original owner? If not, I might suspect that this Dist was installed as a Service Replacement or salvage yard swap somewhere along the way if the original failed.

Or it may have been an engine dress out error.

When was your GTO final assembled? I've never paid attention to the date coding of misc engine parts, but I suspect it would be unusual for an early May '64 dated Dist to be installed in a '65, no matter when built.

This would be especially true if the 1111040 had no specified usage for '65, in which case, typically, excess parts would have been sent to the Parts Warehouse for Service Replacement use at the end of the Model Year, which would have been late July, early Aug after '64 production ended, no reason to keep the 1111040 at the assembly plant if it was not to be used in '65..

The '66 MPC indicates no usage for the 1111040 for '65 but that could be a consequence of a p/n supersedure.

Do you have the AMA specs for '65? Perhaps the early '65 Dist. p/ns will be listed in that document and maybe the 1111040 will be listed. If it had any '65 usage, there would be a possibility that it was installed in your engine on purpose (even if by engineering approved deviation) or by mistake. As long as the Dist was "in the building", anything is possible.

Also check the Shop Manual, I think the Dist p/ns are listed there in the electrical specs.

It is conceivable that the 1111040 was designated for the GTO Tri-Power w/ TI in '65. As I mentioned, it has quicker advance specs than the 1111047, the '65 GTO TP/TI Dist shown for SR in the MPC.

The date coding is the most troubling to my eye but the TI option was not very common, so perhaps not so odd as compared to standard points Dists that presumably had a lot more inventory turnover.
John V. Thank you for your response, I did contact the original owner of the car ( I bought the car from him just a few months ago) He ordered the car in July of 1964 and it was delivered to him on Dec 11, 1964. he stated the dist has never been changed or replaced at any time. He also explained why it took so long for his car to be built and delivered, Mostly due to a 45 day strike by GM in 1964.
I do not have any other way to research the part. But I do know it is the one that the car was born with.
It would be nice to find more lit on the TI GTO from 1965.

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Old 11-20-2013, 08:54 PM
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The 1965 Pontiac Tempest chassis shop manual only shows one TI distributor for the GTO: 1111047. The 326 had its own TI model number. Eric White's book from the GTO Association of America does show that the 65 GTO used a different TI distributor used late in the model year: 1111080.

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Old 11-20-2013, 10:17 PM
RAII 4-speed RAII 4-speed is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Option 382 View Post
The 1965 Pontiac Tempest chassis shop manual only shows one TI distributor for the GTO: 1111047. The 326 had its own TI model number. Eric White's book from the GTO Association of America does show that the 65 GTO used a different TI distributor used late in the model year: 1111080.
Ok so, a little confused here...... What does the 1964 shop manual show for a tri power TI?
My 1111040 dist is the one my car was born with and it was built in 1964.

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Old 11-21-2013, 05:13 AM
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For 1964 Standard Cars 1111040 were used on 421 engines and 1111047 were used on 389 engines.
For 1964 Tempest 1111040 were used.

For 1965 Standard Cars 389, 421 4-bbl uses 1111047. (389 2-bbl uses 1111080).
For 1965 Tempest 1111047 were used.

1111040 starts 0-2°@800rpm, 18-22°@2000rpm, 22-26°@4800rpm and max 20.4-26°@6000rpm´s.
Note: After maximum centrifugal advance is reached and distributor speed is increased above that needed to obtain maximum centrifugal advance, it is characteristic of this unit for centrifugal advance to decrease approximately .5 of a degree for each increase of 500 distributor rpm (1000 crank rpm).

1111047 starts 0-2°@800rpm, 14-18°@2000rpm and max 20-24°@4400rpm´s.

Both are using the #1116172 vacuum advance, starts@8-10 in/hg and gives max 20°@14.75-16.75 in/hg.

1964 production finished 8-2-64 and 1965 production started 8-24-64, this makes finding a may 1964 made part on a 1965 vehicle from factory unlikely.

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Old 11-21-2013, 08:35 AM
RAII 4-speed RAII 4-speed is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kenth View Post
For 1964 Standard Cars 1111040 were used on 421 engines and 1111047 were used on 389 engines.
For 1964 Tempest 1111040 were used.

For 1965 Standard Cars 389, 421 4-bbl uses 1111047. (389 2-bbl uses 1111080).
For 1965 Tempest 1111047 were used.

1111040 starts 0-2°@800rpm, 18-22°@2000rpm, 22-26°@4800rpm and max 20.4-26°@6000rpm´s.
Note: After maximum centrifugal advance is reached and distributor speed is increased above that needed to obtain maximum centrifugal advance, it is characteristic of this unit for centrifugal advance to decrease approximately .5 of a degree for each increase of 500 distributor rpm (1000 crank rpm).

1111047 starts 0-2°@800rpm, 14-18°@2000rpm and max 20-24°@4400rpm´s.

Both are using the #1116172 vacuum advance, starts@8-10 in/hg and gives max 20°@14.75-16.75 in/hg.

1964 production finished 8-2-64 and 1965 production started 8-24-64, this makes finding a may 1964 made part on a 1965 vehicle from factory unlikely.

Great info here.
Although unlikely, it is the dist that was installed in the car when factory built in California in 1964.

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Old 11-21-2013, 09:12 AM
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Quote:
Although unlikely, it is the dist that was installed in the car when factory built in California in 1964.
Unless you were there at all times when the car was worked on, you would not know if it is the original distributor?

The TI's had problems and many had service bulletins for them.
Many were replaced.

What they were replaced with I don't know.
Possibly the dealer changed it at some time because of a 'no start' or other customer complaint.
The dealer may not have told the customer what they did.
(it didn't cost the customer any money)

The customer gets his car back running like a champ and he doesn't know what they actually did, just that it was fixed.


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Old 11-21-2013, 09:23 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by johnta1 View Post
Unless you were there at all times when the car was worked on, you would not know if it is the original distributor?

The TI's had problems and many had service bulletins for them.
Many were replaced.

What they were replaced with I don't know.
Possibly the dealer changed it at some time because of a 'no start' or other customer complaint.
The dealer may not have told the customer what they did.
(it didn't cost the customer any money)

The customer gets his car back running like a champ and he doesn't know what they actually did, just that it was fixed.

I guess anything is possible.
I do have all the paperwork anytime the car went in for service and there is no paperwork on changing the dist.
I think we will find that other 65 tri power cars built early have the same dist as mine.

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Old 11-21-2013, 09:39 AM
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Quote:
I think we will find that other 65 tri power cars built early have the same dist as mine.
That would be good.


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Old 11-21-2013, 09:43 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by johnta1 View Post
That would be good.

Yes it would be good research.
anyone else out there with an early 65 tri power TI dist ?

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Old 11-21-2013, 11:38 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RAII 4-speed View Post
Yes it would be good research.
anyone else out there with an early 65 tri power TI dist ?
Not me - mine was equipped with the basic point distributor.

I think there was a bit of a reluctance to accept the (newfangled) TI system on the factory race cars in favor of the tried-and-true point type.

I get that sense, anyway...

K

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Old 11-21-2013, 01:52 PM
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Here's a few things on the TI distributors:

1964 Pontiac Specs:




1964 Tempest Specs:




I would not think they would put that TI in your 65 if the 64 GTO spec specified a different one for the GTO only?

Here are some 1965 SCN tidbits:

1964SCN6 issue:



1965SCN3 issue:



So, possibly the '040' is a mis-stamp?
Should be '080'?

But doesn't explain the date code being so old for your GTO?
Or yours being a tripower?


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Old 11-21-2013, 03:55 PM
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Keith, can you check the Dist p/n and date code on yours? As a very early Pontiac Plant build, might be interesting to see if it matches to the expected points Dist per any of the references.

Kenth, can you identify your source for the Dist usages for '64 & '65?

My stuff agrees with yours for the '64 big cars per:

SCN No. 2 1964 (published approximately March '64), page 30 which is a revised big car Electrical Spec chart to replace what is in the Shop Manual, shows all 421 engines (no distinction for HO or not) were to get 1111040 with TI. And all 389s were to get 1111047 with TI.

I do not have the '64 big car Shop Manual, so I do not know if the Dist specs changed with this SCN or not.

For the '64 Tempest, the Shop Manual does not cover the GTO.

It only lists the 326 optional engine for the Tempest and says they were to get 1111040 with TI.

The same SCN, page 31 provides the revised Electrical Spec Chart for the '64 Tempest. Shows 1111040 for 326 with TI and adds the 1111047 for GTO with TI.

The '64 Tempest AMA electrical specs, page revised 11/30/63, shows the same usage as the SCN, 1111040 for 326 and 1111047 for GTO. A curiosity in the AMA specs, as I read it, suggests that the 1111040 is std. for the 4 bbl 326HO and the 1111047 is std. for the GTO. I don't know if this was just a misunderstanding in the submission of the AMA specs or if perhaps it had been considered to provide the TI as std. equipment for the 326HO and GTO.

I do not have good references for the '65.

It is not clear to me if the Dist p/ns 1111078, 1111079, 1111080, and 1111081 existed at the start of '65 Model Year production. Of these (4) p/ns, 1111080 and 1111081 are the TI Dists.

I do not know when these (4) may have entered production, but it would be useful to determine what the earliest assembly date for this series of Dists. was.

The '66 MPC lists the same SR Dist for all '64 TI applications except that the 421 application is omitted from the listing. However, it does list the '63 421HO with TI as getting the 1111040. No idea why it only lists the HO but it does seem consistent with the '64 421 usage being the 1111040.

According to the '66 MPC, the Service Replacement TI Dist for the '65 326 Tempest was 1111081.

The '66 MPC also shows the '65 & '66 big car 2 or 4 bbl getting 1111080 with TI. Does not distinguish between 389 and 421.

Shows the '65 big car Tri-Power and '65 GTO Tri-Power getting 1111047 with TI. Again does not distinguish between 389 and 421.

Shows the '65 & '66 GTO 4 bbl getting 1111080 with TI.

The apparent difference between the '64 1111040 and the '65 1111081 is the vacuum advance model.

The '64 used the 1116172 as you noted.

The '65 used the 1116243. The Delco mechanical advance specs were often different than what Pontiac published in the Shop Manuals, not sure if this was also true of the vac advance specs.

But comparing the Delco specs for the 1116243, it starts at 8-10 in. Hg. and the max. advance is 10 deg. at 15-17 in. Hg.

I have the same specs as you for the 1116172 except the Max Distributor Advance is 10 deg, 20 deg that you posted must be at the crankshaft. Assuming I am correct, there is just the slightest spec difference between these 2 vac units.

The mechanical advance specs you posted did not look consistent with what Delco shows for the 1111047 until I realized you must be posting crank advance. Delco and the Pontiac literature lists distributor advance.

The 1111080 is slightly different from the 1111047. My reference does not include specs for the 1111040 or the 1111081 but I bet they are slightly different from each other also.

Delco shows:

1111047 Start 400 rpm 0-2 deg, Intermediate 1000 rpm 7-9 deg, Max 2200 rpm 10-12 deg
1111080 Start 480 rpm 0-2 deg, Intermediate 1000 rpm 6-8 deg, Max 2300 rpm 10-12 deg

The SCN shows:

1111047 Start 400 0-2 deg, Inter 1000 rpm 7-9 deg, Inter 2200rpm 10-12, Max 3000 rpm 9.2-12 deg

1111040 Start 400 0-2 deg, Inter 1000 rpm 9-11 deg, Inter 2400 rpm 11-13 deg, Max 3000 rpm 10.2-13 deg

Note, these specs are listed in the SCN for the big cars, Tempest shows same but omits the 2200 & 2400 rpm Intermediate spec for the 1111047 & 1111040 respectively.

It would be interesting to obtain the Delco specs for the 1111081.

None of this proves that a '65 GTO w/ Tripower should not have 1111040 as the original Dist.

I think all of the possibilities discussed are plausible.

Even if the date code is significantly different from the norm, there is still the chance that an "old" 1111040 was used up for this single build.

Nothing I have however indicates any '65 usage of the 1111040. As I suggested earlier, if there was no planned '65 usage, and assembly plant inventory normally would have been sent to a Parts Warehouse, not "used up".

But there is really no way to establish if it is or isn't.

RAII, the '65 strike started about a month after '65 production began. Apparently your GTO failed to get built before the strike began? The strike was settled within 38 days, walkout started Sept. 25, 1964 and generally all plants were back running by Nov. 9, 1964. The contract was ratified by the UAW on Oct. 25 and many workers were expected back on the job by the next day according to news reports at the time, but most of the final assembly plants remained out another week or so to resolve local issues. Fremont was one of the Plants that did not return right away. I don't know when Fremont returned to production.

While trying to learn when Fremont started back, I found the attached story in a radical newspaper. Published on the day I think they DID start back up Nov. 9), it explains what was happening at Fremont and why they did NOT return to work after the national agreement was passed on Oct. 25. I thought the story was pretty cool, so posting it here.

When was your car actually built?

RAII, you've done all you can to establish the validity by discussing with the original owner and checking the repair paperwork. Was the car ever in for a misfire complaint or anything like that? Was any other part of the TI system repaired/replaced? I agree with what johnta1 suggested about a Dist swap repair that wasn't detailed on a work order being possible. Just no way to be sure.

One of those things that all you can do is rationalize and perhaps hope for evidence to turn up to suggest it was a common thing. As rare as TI is, probably not likely to be found.

I wouldn't worry about it, I wish my GTO was optioned with TI, and I'd just be happy if it was a functional unit, whether it was still original or not.
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Old 11-21-2013, 04:01 PM
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John, thanks, bud, that was simpler than what I tried to do!

The '65 Dist revisions are very interesting.

I don't think the 1111040 was mismarked.

But I wonder if maybe there were other revisions.

Doesn't anybody have the '65 Shop Manuals or possibly the '65 AMA specs that might show what the usage was BEFORE these announced revisions in '65?

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Old 11-21-2013, 06:56 PM
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RAII, the '65 strike started about a month after '65 production began. Apparently your GTO failed to get built before the strike began? The strike was settled within 38 days, walkout started Sept. 25, 1964 and generally all plants were back running by Nov. 9, 1964. The contract was ratified by the UAW on Oct. 25 and many workers were expected back on the job by the next day according to news reports at the time, but most of the final assembly plants remained out another week or so to resolve local issues. Fremont was one of the Plants that did not return right away. I don't know when Fremont returned to production.

While trying to learn when Fremont started back, I found the attached story in a radical newspaper. Published on the day I think they DID start back up Nov. 9), it explains what was happening at Fremont and why they did NOT return to work after the national agreement was passed on Oct. 25. I thought the story was pretty cool, so posting it here.

When was your car actually built?

RAII, you've done all you can to establish the validity by discussing with the original owner and checking the repair paperwork. Was the car ever in for a misfire complaint or anything like that? Was any other part of the TI system repaired/replaced? I agree with what johnta1 suggested about a Dist swap repair that wasn't detailed on a work order being possible. Just no way to be sure.

One of those things that all you can do is rationalize and perhaps hope for evidence to turn up to suggest it was a common thing. As rare as TI is, probably not likely to be found.

I wouldn't worry about it, I wish my GTO was optioned with TI, and I'd just be happy if it was a functional unit, whether it was still original or not. [/QUOTE]


As for what I know from the original owner and what he wrote on his notes back in 1964 the strike in Freemont Cal was 45 days..... attached is a copy of his notes


I am not sure of exactly when the car was built, I do know it was delivered on 12/11/1964. here is a picture of the fire wall tag



One of those things that all you can do is rationalize and perhaps hope for evidence to turn up to suggest it was a common thing. As rare as TI is, probably not likely to be found.
I understand.... there is no repair orders for the TI . But there has to be an explanation as to why the 40 TI was installed at the factory.

Yes the TI is nice and it works great and according to the original owner it always did work fine with no issues.
maybe continued research will find the answer.

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Old 11-21-2013, 11:12 PM
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IN the Camaro world, the high performance distributors were made in batch sets. so its not uncommon to see a distributor two, three, four or five months out, the big picture if it was around it was used 400 to 500 cars a day

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