52 Pickup stop engine issues
Been hooking up wiring on 52 willys pickup. I only have the schematics in my Willys schematic manual to go by. My truck has the mechanical foot pedal starter and I ran wires to what I figured was correct by the book as they had been unhooked and poorly marked for reattachment. It does start and all guages seem to work but the three position key switch does not want to turn it off. This is one that does not have the resistant start position and has three screws on the back. Any ideas? I know I am going to have to rewire and was thinking about making up my own wires. What guage of wire would be best? The truck runs but has been smoking a lot of acrid blue smoke. The fellow I got the motor from said it might need a carb overhaul when I got the motor from him years ago. It has a Carter WO on it now and my other motor had a Solex which is around somewhere. I have to try to find it and give that a try. Are there any pointers about overhauling a Carter WO?
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Figuring Out an Ignition Switch, Wire Sizes and Solex Carburetors
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Wiotaman
Been hooking up wiring on 52 willys pickup. I only have the schematics in my Willys schematic manual to go by. My truck has the mechanical foot pedal starter and I ran wires to what I figured was correct by the book as they had been unhooked and poorly marked for reattachment. It does start and all guages seem to work but the three position key switch does not want to turn it off. This is one that does not have the resistant start position and has three screws on the back. Any ideas? I know I am going to have to rewire and was thinking about making up my own wires. What guage of wire would be best?
A. You may be the victim of the First Rule of Jeep – What you see is what you have.
What do I mean by this? What you have might not match any diagram you find because you never know just who did what after it left the factory (or even before at the factory).
A 1952 Pickup should be a Model 473, but all Model 473’s were not equal. 1952 marked the first year that the trucks had a key start – but Willys-Overland was notorious for lack of configuration control. A 1951 truck might have had its factory paperwork reissued as a 1952 or – gasp – a 1952 build might not have had the key start added until all of the old harnesses and starters were built out.
I have looked at a number of wiring diagrams, and it surprises me that the Model 473 ignition switches show up as just two wire switches; ON and OFF only. My ’48 is a three position switch; CCW for Accessories, Center OFF and CW for Accessories and RUN.
Since you do not have a Start return spring, you probably have a switch with the Accessory position; maybe original, maybe not (See First Rule of Jeep above).
The best way to figure this out is with a simple light continuity tester or a cheap Harbor Freight meter.
You have three screws. Look at the photo I’ve attached for the back of my switch. The terminal that took a nut was the BATTERY terminal and the other two terminals were the ACC and RUN terminals; they took screws. Figure out your continuity tester and we’ll try to find out just what screw goes where. Turn the key until the tester says that no screw is connected to any other. We’ve found the OFF position of the key.
If that position is fully CCW, turn the key one step CW. Two terminals should be connected to one another. These two are BATTery and ACCessory. Gauges and heater should go to ACC. Turn the key one more step CW. Now, all three terminals should be connected together. The last terminal to connect is the RUN terminal and that should be connected to the coil. Accessories stay connected in RUN position.
If the position with no terminal connected is the center position, like it is on the ’48, turn the key full CCW. You will find two terminals connected; BATT and ACC. Turn the key fully CW and you will find that all three terminals are connected. The last terminal to get connected is RUN – the terminal that goes to the coil.
In neither case, did I specify which terminal was BATT and which was ACC. BATT might be a terminal that takes a nut, or it might take a bigger screw. If the two are otherwise identical, just consider them interchangeable.
If, for some reason, you can’t find a position that leaves all three terminals disconnected – you have a bad switch – not an unheard condition.
Let us know what you find out…
B. As for wires and cables - Roger on what GMWillys said about battery cables and 6-volts. 6-volts is OK. Millions of Jeeps started all over world in all kinds of weather with 6-volt systems, but you have to pay attention to cables, terminals and starter brushes.
C. For the big wire from the hot terminal on the starter up to the back of the circuit breaker, I'd go no smaller that #10 - that wire runs everything all over the vehicle. Once you get to the small stuff, #12 is probably OK, but stay with at least #10 up to the headlights - there aren't many volts in a 6-volt system and you don't want to waste any in wire drop.
D. Once you get through throwing and kicking the Solex carb, dig a hole and bury it. (Yeah, we have opinions...)