Eric, In the absence of any noises, I'll guess lack of fuel or spark, especially if the car has an electronic ignition module. These fail at the drop of a hat! If the failure was indeed caused by my beginning this list topic, (which I have been known to do from time to time, unintentionally of course)I will state that when the timing chain jumped on my Mark VI, it happened when I was actually driving the car. There was no sound, no stumble, it just plain quit. Oh yes, I was also exiting the freeway (wink). It cranked very fast after that, but I had no clue what was wrong with it. Eric, have you done something that would deserve this jinx? Paul (LOL) In a message dated 12/5/2003 8:40:01 PM Eastern Standard Time, gearhead@xxxxxxxxxxx writes: > > > Hi all, I think the list jinxed my Newport ;-) (Paul, didn't u > start this thread? Hrrphmft!) > Coming off the freeway last night, motor died, cranks kinda funky, no start. > 143k on this 440. I guess I'll add "Timing Chain R&R" to the "Torqueflite > R&R" @ 125k regular maintenance list. > > My question on the subject: with my 1972, 8.2 compression 440, what are the > chances there could be piston to valve interference? No noises accompanied > this event, whew! > > Thanks. > Eric > '63 Crown Four-Door > '72 Newport Custom Sedan > > >