Ive been following this ongoing discussion on mag timing here at ytmag and other JD forums for the last several months. I have spoken to my local magneto expert and he has checked all his sources for the 25 deg long lug cups with no luck. He refered me to Std. Magneto, who now owns Wico.I called Std. Mag and talked to a man there about this. He made me sound as if the notion were the craziest thing he had ever heard. He said that cup was just made for one particular tractor and that he had 60 of those cups on the shelves for over 20 years before they all sold out. Said it wouldnt make any difference in how the tractor ran and unless you were pulling, or running high compression for some other reason, it wasnt advisable. He said they would have to make at least 500 of them to justify the effort and he said they'd never sell so he wasnt gonna have em made. I wish I would have gotten his name, but I did email Std. Mag a link to this forum and told them I thought they were making a huge marketing error. Listen, I am a machinist. What you guys have been saying makes perfect sense to me. I run gasoline exclusively in my '39 B and I would like to try a 25 degree timing setup. I cant even rotate my mag enough to get it below 30 degrees or so. These 25 degree cups might be hard to find, but hey, its only a little piece of metal, right? Why would it not be possible to take a short lug 25 degree cup and weld up the lugs to the longer length, and then re-machine the flats on the side of the lugs to the correct width? Is the lug length the only difference between the two? I think I am understanding that the short lug was made for the X mag, correct? Will it still mount into the C, even tho it would be too short to work correctly with the slot in the governor? I have seen a grand total of one - count em, (1) magneto disassembled, so yes, I am talking from a position of ignorance here, but I fabricate metal parts for a living so this is just how I think. As far as strength goes, I wouldnt judge this to be a highly stressed part, so welding wouldnt seem to be detrimental as long as it was done by a good welder with heat control in mind to keep it from warping all to hell. If these parts do interchange, (please let me know thru this forum) I plan on trying this process and will surely let you guys know over the next few months how it goes. Mr. Browning, I have one of your H resto books, and I look forward to hearing your opinion on this.
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