Let me re write that, what I was trying to say was that if you are a
tooth off the PCM can pull enough timing to get things synched up, if
for instance you were a post off in putting on the plug wires, the PCM
cant correct 90 degrees of timing, so it would pop bang and backfire....
It would be the equivalent of having the distributor 4 teeth off or so...
Does that make better sense?
Later
Dave
it makes more sense but this is my thinking: the advance has to occur at the same angular point bfore TDC for some given engine running params (rpm, temps, etc)
now if you move the dist 1 tooth ahead or behind the PCM will still give the spark at the same point for the same engine running params - the spark would occur at a different position inside the dist cap but the ignition advance is the same relative to the TDC for a cylinder (and that is given by the flywheel teeth and the crank sensor and these have not moved).
the cam sensor is only used for injector sequence, has no input/influence in the ignition timing.
I don't see what/how would the PCM do with the timing to correct that (the spark would still occur at the same point, so you still have the same ignition advance)
i don't even think the engine would run with the cam/crank out of sync (i read an article for a 4.0 where the dist was not set properly and the engine would run for 2 seconds and then cut out, once they fixed the dist position started to run fine) - have not tested this so it's only from what i read.