Now Eric, What you describe is what I would have expected to see, and now since it is confirmed, your Chrysler did the exact same thing as my Lincoln Mark VI, right down to the circumstances of leaving a freeway. My, what a "timely" thread we weave! Didn't this start out with "I have been on here since July and I haven't seen anything about the 440 skipping time at around 100,000 miles" or something to that effect? Paul In a message dated 12/7/2003 12:38:31 AM Eastern Standard Time, gearhead@xxxxxxxxxxx writes: > > > Confirmation: Cam gear all chewed up, chain so loose that I could lift it > off the gear. > Paul, did you have a question about timing gears, I can tell u all about > them, now. :-) > > Eric > '63 Crown Four-Door > '72 Newport Custom Sedan > > From: dardal@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Date: Sat, 6 Dec 2003 10:44:26 -0600 > Subject: IML: 72 440 dead > Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Eric, before you conclude that the timing gear jumped a tooth and is > responsible > for the engine dying, why don't you try the more usual (and easy to repair) > factors first. Is there fuel? Is there spark? Drop a small quantity of > gas > in the carb, and crank it. If it tries to fire up, may be you have a fue > problem. (are there any gasoline smells coming from the carb whith the air > cleaner off? Any fuel squarting when you pump the throttle linkage by > hand?). > If that turns out negative (fuel delivary OK) try spark. Remove a sparkplug > and with the plug wire on it, put the plug on a metal part of the car to get > it > grounded. Then crank, and observe for spark. This is easier done at night. > > Does 72 year model have electronic ignition? These are known to die w/out > warning. > > D^2 > > >