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Distributors and their associated components manage spark timing and distribution in older point-style and electronic ignition systems, routing high-voltage current from the coil to each cylinder in firing order sequence. Most vehicles built before the mid-1990s rely on a distributor; some marine engines, small-block V8s in classic trucks, and certain import engines used them into the early 2000s. Common failure points include the rotor, cap, ignition pickup (reluctor sensor), and vacuum advance unit — the distributor housing itself rarely fails unless it's been run dry of oil or physically damaged. When buying a replacement distributor, confirm your engine's firing order, rotation direction, and whether the unit needs to be recurved for a modified engine. For rotors and pickups, OEM-spec or quality aftermarket units from brands like Standard Motor Products or Cardone are generally reliable; cheap no-name rotors are a known cause of intermittent misfire and arc-over failures.
Signs you need replacement
- Engine misfires or runs rough at idle or under load. A worn distributor rotor or cracked cap allows voltage to arc to the wrong terminal or to ground, causing one or more cylinders to misfire intermittently — often worse in humid conditions.
- Hard starting or no-start condition. A failed ignition pickup (Hall effect or magnetic reluctor sensor inside the distributor) stops sending the trigger signal to the ignition module, resulting in no spark and a crank-no-start.
- Timing that can't be set correctly or drifts. A worn distributor drive gear or loose shaft bushing introduces slop into the timing, making it impossible to achieve a stable ignition advance curve — often shows up as pinging under load or poor fuel economy.
- Engine lacks power or stumbles on acceleration. A vacuum advance diaphragm with a cracked or leaking membrane won't advance timing under light throttle, causing sluggish response and increased fuel consumption on carbureted or early TBI engines.
- Visible cracks, carbon tracking, or corrosion on the cap. Carbon tracking (thin black lines between terminals inside the cap) causes crossfire between cylinders. Replace the cap and rotor together — separating them is false economy.
- Oil contamination around the distributor base. A leaking distributor O-ring or housing seal allows engine oil to migrate up into the distributor body, fouling the pickup and causing erratic spark timing. A $5 O-ring is often all that's needed.
Frequently asked questions
- How often should I replace the distributor cap and rotor? On vehicles still using a distributor, cap and rotor replacement is typically recommended every 30,000–50,000 miles as part of a tune-up. High-performance or forced-induction engines should inspect them closer to 20,000 miles due to higher voltage demand and heat cycling. Always replace them as a set.
- Is an aftermarket distributor as good as OEM, or should I stick with factory? For a daily driver, quality remanufactured units from Cardone or new distributors from Standard Motor Products are solid choices and typically cost $80–$180 versus $200–$400+ for OEM. For a performance build or a show car requiring exact originality, OEM or a brand like MSD or Pertronix is worth the premium. Verify advance curve specs match your tune.
- What else should I replace when swapping out a distributor? Replace the rotor, cap, ignition pickup, and distributor O-ring at the same time — labor overlap makes it cost-effective, and worn ancillary parts will undermine a new distributor immediately. If the drive gear shows wear, inspect the camshaft gear as well. Budget $150–$350 total for parts on most domestic V8 applications.















































