Aha! I did not see the link; I had clicked on the picture!
Once it runs, it runs fine, mosquito smoke screen notwithstanding.
Simple things first...how good is the battery and does it provide enough CCA? When you hook up a starter pack to the battery and then crank the truck, does that fix the issue? If so...battery most likely.
I see you had your pickup hooked up with starter cables in the video. Normally, that should give enough OOMPH but a good starter pack is often superior to the starter cables.
When the cranking develops a "gallop" or "hits a wall" I'd think of a valve train issue (stuck valves) or a flywheel/toothed ring issue (maybe tons of rodent material in there?). A corroded cylinder wall is possible as well, but after some running I would expect that to go away.
You replaced the starter. Can't hurt to deliberately clean and freshen all the grounds as well. They can look ok but corroded bolts can really cut down on current.
The battery I had hooked up directly to the battery cables was a little low, 11.9 V, the batteries I had hooked to the jumpers from the other truck we’re fully charged and put out 1370 cold cranking amps each, but it’s jumper cables, not a lot of contact surface on either end.
I unfortunately killed the new starter in the short bit of time I tried to get the machine running after it stopped the last time, so when I take that out I will pull off the grounds and clean them up.
With the jump pack (Noco GBX155 4250A) or being jumpstarted with the truck it doesn’t make a difference for the hitting the wall.
The one thing that does make a difference is if I leave the fuel pump off and the system runs out of fuel it turns over freely, but the second it’s about to fire it hits that wall which makes me think that maybe the spark is happening just a little bit too soon.
All the smoke that you saw while the vehicle is running was likely because I filled all of the cylinders up with sea foam, left it in there for 24 hours and then turned the engine over to spit the stuff out.
I’ll take the starter in to get repaired, clean off the grounds replace the bolts, put one of the good batteries that are in my truck with the 1300 cold cranking amps in the 6 x 6 and then leave the fuel pump off while turning the engine over and if it turns over freely no problem turn on the fuel pump and see if it will start easier that way.
When I did the oil change, the oil looked like it had been used in a diesel engine, thin viscosity, but very black.
I’ll try to figure out how to get the timing right, I’ve been around diesel engines most of my life so I’ll have to figure out which way to turn the distributor and by how much.
Thank you for your reply and suggestions, I appreciate it.