Thanks for the input. My car is in a nice dry place at the moment, so I don't have any photos. I was trying to anticipate the first job to be done in the warm weather, if it ever arrives! I may have a relatively small window before needing the car for a wedding in early May. That distributor looks a bit larger physically than the TA14, though I may be wrong. I do have access to machining facilities, etc, at work so making a drive adapter would probably be possible. There are many 4 cylinder distributors available in the UK, which could be made to fit in the hole and turn with the engine. However, as far as I know, and I could be very wrong, the key thing with replacing the distributor on a vehicle is matching the centrifugal advance and, unless you are quite lucky, one from another model is unlikely to have the correct characteristics. There's a great document about Lucas distributors at <!-- m --><a class="postlink" href="http://campkahler.com/files/Lucas-400e-to-F68-ocr.pdf">http://campkahler.com/files/Lucas-400e-to-F68-ocr.pdf</a><!-- m --> which shows all the models and their characteristics. For the TA14 it says the Lucas Part No is 40071D/F, Model No DKY4A, Type BU36, Clockwise Rotation, ECM Curve 363, Advance 23 to 27 degrees. What isn't clear is what ECM Curve 363 represents, unfortunately. There are pictures of most of the parts as well, one of them showing that the drive is via a grooved connection. Amazing what you can find! I take your point about electronics, especially in a car with basic voltage regulation and a dynamo. I think I will search around for a good refurbisher. Tony Posted by tonyl 27/02/2013 19:39:05