I see a lot of Hambers looking for older sets of points. I have a bunch of these NOS sets that I got from a auto parts supply that closed 20 years ago. It was called The Battery Mart in Troy,NY. Most are still in boxes and they look like GM sets to me but I’m not a Chevy guy. I’ll sell them cheap thinking $7.00 a set shipping included for one set and $6 if more is needed. Most of the ones I have show a part number of either CP-2 or CP-89. I don’t want to send them out not knowing exactly what they are. Thanks guys. Sent from my iPad using The H.A.M.B. mobile app
One looks like a six cylinder and the other a V 8. But theses were the points and condenser combined, like the Chevy set. ....... I think? Bones
I’m thinking along the same lines but not sure. ThankS Sent from my iPad using The H.A.M.B. mobile app
Me neither! Just a WAG! Lol .... But, when Chevy, or whoever, made those unit points, they were great and everybody was talking about them! Because the Chevy points and condenser were hard to change with the distributor in the back of the engine. So I guess Ford tried it. But Ford points and condenser were easy to change, being in front of the engine, so I guess they didn’t go over so good! Bones
Looking at boxes, it appears they are knock offs from overseas trying to look like a known USA brand. Clues are no brand name, just "Automotive" "Replaces", "Printed in U.S.A." and the graphics. Might be of low quality, I don't think I would use them on my car.
...........Good catch! I missed that first time around as well. I guess you see what you want to see.
Don't know what they fit but the GM "window" Distributors had slots so you never removed the holding screws.
I should of mentioned. The condenser end is stamped “Heavy MYLAR Duty USA”. Mylar is a polyester that DuPont manufactured. I also have a set of points with a very similar part number CP-1 form SES Box is also marked Springfield Electrical Specialties, Inc. Totowa, NJ. I don’t believe they are cheap knockoff as you stated and you don’t have to use them. Sent from my iPad using The H.A.M.B. mobile app
They're knockoffs, they might not be cheap, but the packaging imitates name brand parts. If you could find an old SES catalog, you could probably figure out what the part numbers mean. The "straight" point set looks like it fits lots of Fords, perhaps you could study pictures of points for different Ford vehicles and see what they match most closely. rockauto.com is a great place to look up parts by application, and then look at pictures of the parts. The integral condenser is a bonus feature, I think. The GM unipoints for 57-74 V8 Delco distributors mentioned above also have a screw to adjust the gap.
Hard to identify. I just got a box of many electrical parts(50-60) marked Filko-there are also 30-40 sets of timken bearings-again no clue what they fit.-have no clue what they fit either. May go in trash or give back to guy who brought em here.
Bearings, sometimes, have common numbers on different brands. Might get the numbers of your bearings and compare to wheel bearing numbers for various cars. Some car part apps give bearing numbers. Bones
some web pages you can type in a part number, and then find the "applications" for it. I entered a part number, then on the list of part numbers, I clicked on one of the numbers, and the applications list popped up.
Back in the mid 70s I worked at a repair shop that my boss took over. He bought all the stock as well and those boxes are very familiar looking. There were also boxes that kind of looked like AC Delco as well as mopar. They were knock off parts in the boxes but they didn't give trouble; we used them all and never had any complaints of short service life. They seemed to be reasonably decent parts but the company marketing them was using look alike logos to sell the parts.
I've never seen that particular brand but the originally may have been sold though discount stores that were pretty much pre Walmart (think Gibsons in Texas or Value Mart) or though discount parts houses. Those stores may have carried a name brand an this "second line" for the guys who didn't want to pay for the name brand just as O'Reilly's carries some second and maybe third brand items today. When I was doing front end and brake work at the Firestone store in down town Waco in the 70's we would run 12.98 for one axle brake jobs. Very simply a take the old shoes off and put new shoes on, Pack the front bearings, adjust the brakes and kick it out the door. We would get the bonded shoes from a discount parts house a few blocks away that honesty had brake shoes in bins by popular numbers. 2 bucks a pair of shoes. We gave a 10K mile guarantee and they were pretty well worn out by 10K but they were quiet and around town in old granny cars stopped quite well and always stopped straight. They just didn't last long. OBTW that G 2 set is backwards as far as GM goes, they are not GM V8. I don't remember installing anything except GM V8 Uni points and have never seen any others.