1st pic- Looks like the setting mark on the cam & front rocker bracket align, if so this puts the cam in position for #4 TDC on the compression stroke; 2nd pic- Rotor is pointing to #1, not #4, so #1 plug will fire, but #1 combustion chamber has a partially open exhaust valve due to the cam position; 3rd pic- Crank timing mark is about 6 degrees before, not 0 degrees, so pistons 1 & 4 are not quite at the top of the stroke; so your engine is NOT at #4 TDC since all three of the conditions I gave you previously are not met. It appears the mechanic installed the cam 180 degrees out, or timed it to #1, not #4 as it should have been. This is a common mistake for those not familiar with Isuzu's #4 timing requirement. The usual fix is to swap the #1 & #4 and the #2 & #3 plug wires on one end to make the cam timing & ignition timing agree, then make a note of the change so that it doesn't get changed back. If you haven't already tried this wire swap it may allow the engine to start, but hold off until you do something else first. I am concerned that the crank is not at 0 degrees when the cam is at #4 TDC, so you need to check to see if the timing chain is off one or more teeth. Do this: First rotate the engine the little bit to where the crank timing marks aligns with 0 degrees, the rotor should still point MOL to #1, take a pic of the cam position, best if from the front of the cam gear showing the gear alignment dowel- ideally it should be straight up and the cam and rocker bracket setting marks should still align. Next rotate the engine one full revolution until the crank mark again aligns at 0 degrees. The rotor should now be pointing to #4. Now take a another picture of the front of the cam gear showing the position of the alignment dowel. With the crank at 0 degrees the cam gear dowel (and the cam setting mark)should be straight up or straight down, if it's pointing to one side of straight up or straight down the chain is likely off one or more teeth. If the cam gear dowel is straight up or straight down when the crank is at 0 degrees the chain is good, you can swap the plug wires, the engine should start. Make sure the valves are adjusted properly first. If the cam gear dowel is pointing off from straight up or straight down when the crank gear is at 0 degrees your chain is off & needs to be corrected, contact the mechanic that installed everything incorrectly and see what he intends to do to fix it. Pulling the cam gear off, then rotating & resetting the chain the number of teeth it looks to be off might fix things to the point the engine will start with the plug wires swapped, but the cam will still be 180 degrees out & you don't know for sure the crank gear was indexed properly with the chain. To fix it right first back off the valve adjusters or the rocker arm brackets so that all the valves are closed (this is so you can rotate the crank without the chance of a piston hitting a valve & can rotate the cam free of spring tension), then rotate the crank to 0 degrees so that the rotor is pointing to #4- this puts both the crank and ignition timing to #4 TDC. Next remove the front timing cover, cam gear and chain, then spin the loose cam until the setting marks align- this puts the cam timing at #4 TDC. Now reinstall the chain, indexing the crank gear and cam gear setting marks with the chain setting links- this puts the proper number of links between the crank and cam setting marks-, install the cam gear with the chain attached, this synchs the crank, cam & ignition to #4 TDC. Install the timing cover, release the tensioner, adjust the valves. With the plug wires back to the original position the engine should start. The oil pan may have to drop to R&R timing cover, so I don't know if this work can be done with the engine in the truck.
_________________ '78 Chevy LUV,1.9,4sp,headers,31's,SAS Dana 30,Dana 20,SOA rear w/Aussie Locker, rough body, bought new 12/4/78. '87 Trooper,2.3,5sp,headers,31's,ball joint flip & spacer,Aussie Locker rear,Superwinch hubs,brush guard w/5.5K winch,more to come.
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