I recently purchased a R32 drift car from Japan that is pretty well built. It has a RB25DET block with a RB20DET head, which I've never seen before, but the car pulls like a mother at the track. I decided to go ahead and do all the routine maintenance on the engine recently, including changing the timing belt. I was trying to get ready for a drift event today, and in my haste I made a careless mistake. I did not set the engine to TDC before removing the timing belt, and thus I didn't see if the timing was actually set to factory or not by whoever built/tuned this motor.
I put the timing back to stock and installed the belt. This is how I've always done cars - put them to their factory settings. When I start the car now, it runs hella rough. I have a Power FC on it and the knock was in the 40s to 60s upon start up. After some tweaking I got the knock down to 0-5, but it still runs like crap. I disconnected the TPS and connected my timing light to coil #1. I set the timing on the crank pulley to 15 degrees; however the power FC shows 22-23 degrees. When I adjust the power FC to a -7 or -8 on the timing, it shows 15 degrees on the power FC; however the engine no longer shows 15 degrees on the crank pulley.
I'm fairly new to performance engines. This engine was running amazingly well before I took it apart, and now I can't get the timing set for the life of me. Based on what I've observed, I'm guessing the previous mechanic had set the exhaust cam 2 teeth off (8 degrees) from the stock timing mark. This is the only thing that makes sense to me as to why the Power FC and Crank Pulley timing marks don't match, as my thinking is that the Power FC was tuned with the exhaust cam 8 degrees off. I've read where people do 4 to 8 degrees on the exhaust cam to get more mid-range power and quicker boost from the turbo; and since this was a drift car that would make sense to me. Because I'm new I thought it would be best to ask the community about this issue before I reset the timing. Thanks in advance for your help!