Vacuum advance can adjustment

Yup. Set initial and centrifugal to what you need. Then set the vacuum can. Best way I've done it is to tape a vacuum gage to the windshield so you can see where things are while driving. Then tune the can to provide max advance without causing a surge or misfire. Race engines in race cars don't benefit from a functioning vacuum advance. Pretty much any engine that experiences widely varying throttle levels will benefit from a properly tuned one. Gas mileage and throttle response are where you see it. I've had cars I drive daily with 4" of vacuum at idle that ran great with the vacuum advance functioning. But - at some point, you get out of the adjustability range of the cans. At that point you're probably in a race engine/race car situation anyway.

Edit - Thanks MAgoo - I'm not up on the Pertronix stuff. I'd still argue that their instructions are not 100* right though assuming they adjust like others'. You're still adjusting the vacuum level required to move the arm. Not the number of degrees. Once the vacuum climbs high enough you will get 14* added no matter what you adjust.

The number marked on the arm is not vacuum it is distributor degrees usually around 14" of vacuum. The adjustment is usually set in the middle of a new can say 7 (14 at the crank) you can only get 14 (28 crank) out of it at the most do it almost every day here. There are a lot of myths regarding them. Most of the mopar are adjustable with a 3/32 allen wrench. Now the engine each one has different timing demands depending on what it is so usually get the mechanical right then go from there with the vacuum. I have had no complaints so far.