All but a couple of the plug wires were incorrectly installed. (wrong firing order) How on earth could this possibly be?
What order did you find them in?
To my knowledge, all FE cams use 1-5-4-2-6-3-7-8. If someone had installed a cam that used a different firing order, it would explain why it was wired in a nonstandard sequence. But I don't think such a cam exists for FEs.
Back in the 80's I consulted for a friend who restored a '69 GT convert with a 351W-4V. One night he called me from the shop where he and his mechanic were trying to start the engine for the first time, and it was sputtering and bucking and backfiring. I knew he had put a brand new cam in it. I told him to switch the plug wires around to 1-5-4-2-6-3-7-8 instead of the sequence isted on the intake manifold. It fired right up and growled like a tiger. He (and his mechanic) didn't know the 302 cam he put in it had a different firing order from the 351. But I did
(I wasn't being a jerk; I only figured out he had the wrong cam AFTER he called me!)
One more story: back in the 90's I had a '69 Cougar convert with a 351W-2V. Drove nicely, despite being somewhat "flexible" from the rusty floors. One day I parked it in the driveway, and came back outside some time later to go for a drive. It cranked and sputtered and tried to start, but just wouldn't go. It was getting fuel, the accelerator pump gave a nice shot. Also had spark at all the plugs. Just wouldn't go. I couldn't think of anything else to check, so I pulled the fuel pump off and stuck my finger in to check the timing chain (insert joke here
). There was about an inch and a half play in the timing chain! When I tore it apart to investigate, it turned out the sprockets were off by a total of THREE teeth! Put a new timing set in, and it fired up and ran smooth and strong. Before the incident, it was probably off by one or two teeth and I didn't even realize it!