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05-17-2007, 07:59 PM | #26 | |
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Re: vacumm advance question
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05-17-2007, 08:08 PM | #27 |
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Re: vacumm advance question
Hey Brian, I meant no dis-respect bud, I believe You've helped me on some issues with my Demon before, I'm sure you kow your stuff, & I know You are right that normally the way to hook it up is to ported vacuum, I just wanted to ad in that in some case's like mine, I had to hook it up to direct vacuum & i thought it was interesting that in the edelbrock owners manual they say it's okay to hook it to manifold vaccum when you have a long duration/radical type of Cam that might require more vacuum at idle.
This is a good discussion topic, believe me I was kinda freaking out that I had to hook it up wrong until I found that section in the owners manual. |
05-17-2007, 09:29 PM | #28 |
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Re: vacumm advance question
A day with out leanring something new is a day wasted
There are for sure a lot of different ways of doing things. There are so many differnet applications that one or the other can't be wrong. Billa, chime in Or for that matter anyone else |
05-17-2007, 09:51 PM | #29 |
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Re: vacumm advance question
I just put a new GMPP HEI dizzy in my truck last week. I am getting too much vacuum advance with it hooked up to manifold vacuum. This Sat. I'll put the adjustable vac can on it and adjust it to about 20 Deg. advance hooked to full manifold vac. Initial will be at 8 deg btc. Then I'll have to play with the springs on the weights to get about 36 deg. of advance total. My truck likes to run with a lot of advance at idle so I give it all I can without pinging and it runs a LOT better! Do any of you guys use bushings on the weights to control or limit the mechanical advance? I've never seen them but someone told me they were available. That might be easier than the springs.
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05-17-2007, 10:37 PM | #30 |
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Re: vacumm advance question
The old 60's stuff was hooked to manifold vacumn from the factory, whereas into the early 70s the trend was ported from the factory(emissions). Now you will get about a lot of different veiws on the proper way to set up the manifold vacumn, but as a rule a true performance eng should be hooked to manifold vacumn. Your run of the mill streeter (close to stock cam ect), may work out better in some apps on ported spark. Full manifold vacumn will smooth the idle, give better throttle response, & keep you engine running cooler(cyl head temps). My 383 (specs in the sig), likes a 34 degree total (all in @ 2800-3000) + 12 degrees extra in the vac can (hooked to manifold vacumn). The trouble with the HEI distribs, & too much advance, is that they need to be recurved to run properly in these old trucks. They were setup to run ported spark, & to run full manifold vac @ the can, you need an adjustable can , such as a Crane unit to cut the vac advance back from 20 or 22 degrees(that the can has) , to the more useable 10-12 that the hipo engins like. The only reason to disable the vac can on a street motor, is with a cam that is so "rowdy" that you dont pull enough vacumn to be able to use the can. you also dont need that vac can for racing, but you will like the mileage & throttle response that it gives on your streeter. Good luck tuning..... L
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05-17-2007, 10:56 PM | #31 |
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Re: vacumm advance question
Some race motors can benefit from vacuum advance. It won't do squat at full-throttle on the track, but it can help it run smoother and cooler in the pits.
I had a 292 with a 310* cam in a Nova for a short time, and hooking up the vacuum advance (manifold vacuum, please) made it run smoother at low rpm, such as in residential areas & school zones. Ported vacuum was introduced for smog devices, and the HEI distributor was designed as a smog device. Recalibrate it like Crazy said and it should work much better. Just don't tell the smog police. Last edited by jimfulco; 05-17-2007 at 10:59 PM. |
05-17-2007, 11:10 PM | #32 | |
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Re: vacumm advance question
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If you had the VA hooked up to direct vacuum down here where it's hot most of the time wouldn't that make the motor drag when starting? Or would there not be enough vacuum present when starting to make a difference? |
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05-17-2007, 11:42 PM | #33 |
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Re: vacumm advance question
Never bothered anything of mine. I don't think there's enough vacuum at starting rpm to mess with it.
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05-17-2007, 11:43 PM | #34 |
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Re: vacumm advance question
All HEIs are not created equal. Most drop in, set up pretty close, and run good...but some of these have just way too much dist advance built in (vac & mech combined) and have to be "fixed" to make them compatible with our heavy trucks.
This is one of those. I don't have separate vac & mech figures on this one yet, but total is over 50. My 68 GM serv manual (396) calls for mech: 28 @ 4200rpm (only 15 @ 2000) and vac: 15 @ 15"+ with 6 initial setting. My 79 GM serv manual (454) call for even less with mech: 20 @ 4200 (only 14 @ 2800) and vac: 10 @ 13"+ with 4 initial setting. Sorry, I don't have a '71 manual close, but it looks like GM set these heavy trucks with BB engines to run around 30 degrees total advance for running in mid-range cruising rpms at part throttle. That seems to agree with what has worked best in the past. So, until I can get an adj vac adv pot or limit the mech adv to shorten up the curve...I will have to leave the vac adj off. Not best, but the pinging will burn a hole in the pistons over time...and it drives me crazy. |
05-18-2007, 02:46 AM | #35 | |
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Re: vacumm advance question
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Here's the best explanation I've ever seen from a VERY HIGHLY respected tuner. |
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05-18-2007, 03:24 AM | #36 |
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Re: vacumm advance question
i have a stock 350 with the points dizzy and i have the VA hose connected to the carb (qjet) and its set at 8* initial, i have no idea what the total is
what would you all say to that? right/wrong, what? all the talk thats gone on so far is giving me a headache, so i thought id just ask about mine instead
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05-18-2007, 11:13 AM | #37 |
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Re: vacumm advance question
One other question, I am from the camp of full vacuum at idle also. But I have always wondered about tuning the carb. Do you tune the carb idle screws with advance plug in or not. Because if you tune it with advance disconnected then when you connect it to full manifold vac the idle tends to go up also?
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05-18-2007, 01:57 PM | #38 |
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Re: vacumm advance question
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05-18-2007, 03:25 PM | #39 |
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Re: vacumm advance question
Man I put a edel 1406 on my truck a few months ago and I can't get it to stop pinging and poping.
This brings more light no the subject 4 sure I think I am going to try turning the dizzy to full advance and see what happens with out the VA....... Good thread keep er going
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05-18-2007, 04:32 PM | #40 | |
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Re: vacumm advance question
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05-18-2007, 07:16 PM | #41 |
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Re: vacumm advance question
What does pinging sound like exactly? I have what sounds like an exhaust leak louder under truck and very metalic sounding, but maybe it is pinging it does it idle.
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05-18-2007, 10:52 PM | #42 |
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Re: vacumm advance question
In most cases the so called "Pinging", otherwise known as spark knock happens under load or acceleration. If you have a metallic noise at idle, that would be another thing. I would try driving with the window down and listen as you accelerate your truck to get out onto a street or highway. If you here something that sounds like a light rod knock, then you are experiencing the "pinging" we have referenced to.
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05-18-2007, 10:54 PM | #43 |
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Re: vacumm advance question
sounds like a bag of marbles in a tin can
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05-19-2007, 08:55 AM | #44 |
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Re: vacumm advance question
The pdf file posted by Billa is very good with one exception. The author states "and, since most vacuum advance control units pull in about 16 degrees of vaccum advance at cruise speed (where the full centrifugal advance will also be deployed), the 36 degree setting will produce 52 degrees of total combined advance at cruise with the vac advance fully deployed."
I don't know about you but I don't have full mechanical advance at cruising speed. I have always set my mechanical advance to be fully deployed at around 3,000 rpms. I would have to be cruising at 100 mph to get to 3,000 rpms and cut in FULL mechanical advance.Maybe I'm not getting something but if your throttle plates are open enough to get 3,000 rpms your manifold vac will be very low. If I'm reading this wrong please educate me. Last edited by gator2511; 05-19-2007 at 01:01 PM. |
05-19-2007, 10:16 AM | #45 |
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Re: vacumm advance question
One reason I like full vacuum at idle is my carb has no choke and I find it really smooths my idle out and makes it easier to keep running on cool mornings.
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05-19-2007, 09:16 PM | #46 | |
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Re: vacumm advance question
Quote:
Typically at cruise manifold vacuum is enough to get most of the vac advance in; 4-5 inches. The biggest help here is to know what your cruise RPM and manifold vacuum is - this isn't hard to get |
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05-19-2007, 10:43 PM | #47 | |
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Re: vacumm advance question
There's a lot of questions flying around about timing. I've been looking around for this for days, and finally found it. It covers about everything you need to know about timing. I copied and pasted from www.camaros.net. Hopefully many of you will find it helpful!
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09-01-2007, 03:52 AM | #48 |
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Re: vacume advance question
I am a little bit confused by all the views. so let me come in late! If I am running a big roller cam is it better for me to use the full manifold vacumm? not the ported vacumm from the carb. But I have another question?...what do i adjust the dizzy vacumm can advance to? if my initial time is @ 8* and everybody agrees you need to have between 32-34* total advance?
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09-01-2007, 03:33 PM | #49 |
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Re: vacume advance question
"Total advance" referrs to the mechanical advance ( the centrifical weights system) plus what the INITIAL setting is (set by positioning the distrib itself). VACUUM advance is set for CRUISING or part trottle operation only. On a stock engine the vacuum advance goes back to 0 degrees as the throttle opens past the little port in the venturi that opens vacuum to the advance unit.The reason for vacuum advance is that under part throttle the cyinders are just partly filled which results in a low compression ratio and much more advance can be tollerated and is needed for economical operation.Racers don't give a rats rear about economical cruising so they don't have any vac unit,and I've heard that the guys with rad cams like to hook the vac up to full vac for better idle etc.But if you want good mileage you will install an ADJUSTABLE vac advance and experiment until you are just a bit below the knock point at cruising/part throttle operation.-Brian
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09-05-2007, 12:58 PM | #50 |
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Re: vacume advance question
my own words of advice anyone with timing issues...1. be sure to check uder the rotor and make sure the springs are opening and closing and operational. 2. always seperate the plug wires from each other. 3. plug vacumm advance and trans vacumm and carb vacumm to set initial timing. when dropping dizzy in harmonic @ 8*-12*. nothin new but..... just simplified.
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