You added advance and the pinging went away?Once in a great while a car with a fresh tune-up would come in complaining about pinging. With adjustable advance I could add a little more advance and cure it. So depending on the car, weather, gas, driving habits, etc, this feature could be helpful, but not normally.
It was cheaper and easier to build one adjustable VA unit than a specific VA can for each individual application.Thanks for the replies. But was there a prescribed method in the FSM on how to adjust the Allen screw? I presume there was some reason a more expensive [$$$] VA unit was used.
Only does the rate not the amount of advance. I tried.......
Yeah, seems very few people paid attention to your cutaway photo. Makes it clear as a bell how it works. But people still argue.Only does the rate not the amount of advance. I tried.......
Yeah, seems very few people paid attention to your cutaway photo. Makes it clear as a bell how it works. But people still argue.
I do believe we're on the same page with it.Strictly speaking the rate does not change unless the spring is changed, just the preload. Changing the preload changes the start and stop.
It's in the Chrysler Master Tech Conference. It's measurable with a vacuum pump. I posted this up 2018 and its easy enough to prove to ones self with distributor and a mity-vac or similar.
I’ve never seen anything published by mopar on how they adjusted them. I do it exactly how Rusty said above.TT5.9,
That makes sense & I thought that might be the case [ pardon the pun ]. But if installing a replacement due to failure, what is the adjustment procedure??
Example: when I convert an engine to MVA, I tighten the spring [ CCW ] 2 turns at time, check the timing with each adjustment. When the timing drops or is no longer steady, I go 3 turns CW. Since Chrys used PVA, how was it adjusted?
Exactly. And no matter how you try to explain it, someone always thinks the opposite. That tightening the adjuster screw makes it take more vacuum to work. It's just like you said.Adjusting the spring either compresses it or reduces the tension. If the Allen screw is fully CW, less vacuum is needed to move the actuator compared to when the screw is would a few turns CCW. So the Allen screw affects spring tension, which in turn affects the amount of vac reqd to move the actuator.