Originally Posted by
pibby
i would go with what bee utey is saying. my dizzy would do the same thing unless i held the shaft down with a screwdriver whilst lifting the rotor off. i was trying different springs in the dizzy so got quite efficient at disassembling/assembling in situ. for your first time disassembling i would recommend pulling the dizzy out. it will take less than a minute to pull out. there is no need to rotate the motor, but you must mark/note where the rotor is pointing with the dizzy in then as you pull it out it rotates through some degrees (30?) which will be the starting point for when you feed it back in. if you are not comfortable with that then by all means rotate till motor is at TDC. if your start point when feeding the dizzy back in is off it is very easily picked up by the rotor being a noticeable distance out once the dizzy is fully home (ie it is very easy to align the distributor back into the correct position). if you don't have circlip pliers for the circlip i found a very small flat head screwdriver was ideal.
up to you whether you get it permanently fixed or reinstall being careful not to make it happen again.
HTH.