All three together.
Thanks for that. So I think my grasp of what I mentioned is at least on the right track then. So if my my peak torque is a 4300rpm then I wouldn't want my timing to be all -in at that point. If my total timing is set for , say 35 degrees, is there a general number of degrees fewer than 35 that I'd want to shoot for at peak torque? I know each combo wants what it wants but I'm wondering what might be a decent number in general... like 30 degrees at peak torque rpm, then rely on stiffer springs to allow it to keep climbing more, to 35 as it approaches peak HP rpm?The concept of ignition timing (advance) is relatively simple and it has everything to do with time. At a given rpm there is an amount of time available (necessary) for the plug to light, and the burn to happen creating the pressure in the chamber, all at the correct time to put the optimal amount of force on the piston at the correct point of rotation. Which is somewhere around 10-15 degrees after TDC. If all we had to do was account for time the curve wouldn’t be as necessary. And the ignition timing could have a relatively simple and small curve to be optimal. But we have to account for efficiency (VE) and load which has everything to do with cylinder filling and how the burn travels through a dense mixture vs a less dense mixture. At peak torque the VE (volumetric efficiency) is at its highest which means the mixture in the chamber is the most dense and cylinder pressure is higher than any other point in the rpm range. A flame moves much faster through a dense mixture than it does through a less dense mixture necessitating a lower advance value. At peak hp the mixture is much less dense and the time available for complete combustion is small so lots of advance becomes necessary. The argument is that one fixed timing advance number can cover all areas of the rpm range depending on desired use and if there is benefit to tailoring the curve to the entire range for those uses.
You have a load during a sweep of course. But you’d have to make a bunch of runs with different timing numbers plugged in at a bunch of different points in the run to develop the curve and compare those runs by overlaying the graphs. If you load it steady state at one rpm (peak torque and peak hp for example) and swing the timing around while watching the observed output you could develop the curve much more effectively or maybe efficiently is the correct word.
Actually no. With the distributor locked usually I can do it in 3 sweeps, sometimes 4 or more. It depends. Look at the graphs I posted and you can see what the motor wants for timing by how they overlay.
You absolutely have the concept. And the only answer to part two of your question is testing. Don’t settle on numbers for the sake of numbers. My bbc NA on the dyno wanted 43 degrees for max power. On boost at peak torque I have 23 in it, as an example.Thanks for that. So I think my grasp of what I mentioned is at least on the right track then. So if my my peak torque is a 4300rpm then I wouldn't want my timing to be all -in at that point. If my total timing is set for , say 35 degrees, is there a general number of degrees fewer than 35 that I'd want to shoot for at peak torque? I know each combo wants what it wants but I'm wondering what might be a decent number in general... like 30 degrees at peak torque rpm, then rely on stiffer springs to allow it to keep climbing more, to 35 as it approaches peak HP rpm?
Going by that graph, are you saying because the engine picked up everywhere changing from 30 to 34 that the concept isn’t valid? What happens if you put 40 in it? You may have arrived at the correct value for peak torque but haven’t yet got to peak hp. That’s all you can gleam from the graph alone.
Your not telling me why. You just keep saying you can't. Only louder each time. lol. You see the difference right?
This is a spec. 350 2bbl motor. Fast distributor and fast box. Timing loses less than 2 degrees through the rpm range. Timing set at 5000 rpm. locked. This shows what I typically see. Notice the difference in timing requirements isn't at the peaks but rather above and below the peaks. 30 degrees of locked timing hit the sweet spot on both ends. Not saying in some cases a curve can't help. Just not in every case and the amount it helps varies. Here is a picture of the data with graphs to follow.
Edit: added graph.
View attachment 1716472524
View attachment 1716472533
What do you mean by a cycle?
I think this is a very powerful statement. I’ve seen motorhome 440s with 10 psi of boost so numb to timing changes that even on boost we ended up at 39 degrees. And peak torque was the same rpm as peak power. Weird stuff happens sometimes and each engine is different.Not saying in some cases a curve can't help. Just not in every case and the amount it helps varies.
I think this is a very powerful statement. I’ve seen motorhome 440s with 10 psi of boost so numb to timing changes that even on boost we ended up at 39 degrees. And peak torque was the same rpm as peak power. Weird stuff happens sometimes and each engine is different.
What’s the compression on the 602 crates with 2 barrels?
Agree. But a rising boost curve puts peaks in artificial places and does weird things with very low cylinder pressure.I don’t know how to even begin to explain that engine other than to say it is an outlier of outliers.
Both with the amount of timing it wanted and how peak torque and power were at the same rpm.
Just weird but certainly not even remotely close to normal.
Steve Morris just did a video with Holdener testing an LS with different cylinder heads and they ended up with wild timing numbers for a boosted LS and had hp/tq peaks at similar rpm. They were using a centrifugal blower with a rising boost curve. It’s always a combination of factors at play. Piston design, chamber design, and cylinder filling. Each one is a different animal.
I was going to watch that and forgot all about it.
Now I need to go find it and watch.
It didn't pick up everywhere at 34 deg. It lost everywhere until about 6900 on up where it almost made as much as 30 degrees. 28 degrees compared to 30 made a hair less (nearly the same) all up to about 6000 where it separates and starts making less the rest of the way up. I know those charts are hard to read on here. I added a graph below. Maybe that will help.Going by that graph, are you saying because the engine picked up everywhere changing from 30 to 34 that the concept isn’t valid? What happens if you put 40 in it? You may have arrived at the correct value for peak torque but haven’t yet got to peak hp. That’s all you can gleam from the graph alone.
They whistle around 9.1 - 9.3. Just to make sure we are on the same page the dyno graphs I posted are of a spec motor not a 602 crate. Spec motor= 10.5 max comp. spec heads (stock replacement cast iron). Spec dual plane intake. Flat tappet, 2bbl. holley, 7400 rpm limit. Link to the specific rules below.What’s the compression on the 602 crates with 2 barrels?
It didn't pick up everywhere at 34 deg. It lost everywhere until about 6900 on up where it almost made as much as 30 degrees. 28 degrees compared to 30 made a hair less (nearly the same) all up to about 6000 where it separates and starts making less the rest of the way up. I know those charts are hard to read on here. I added a graph below. Maybe that will help.
View attachment 1716472813
The ignition loses less than 2 degrees of timing through the entire curve. Consider for the sake of this example for now it loses zero timing and at the end you can adjust the numbers by adding 3/4 degree at the bottom and subtracting 3/4 degree at the top if you like.Which is what I’d expect. You are saying your results match exactly what I’m saying. You just refuse to accept it.
Your locked timing is a compromise everywhere. 34 made less power everywhere and almost caught up at the very top of the power curve. That makes perfect sense.
28 and 30 are close until past peak torque and then it wants more timing so the 30 picks up. That makes perfect sense.
Your numbers tell you it wants a curve. It will be a slow curve but it wants a curve.
That makes sense. I don't think anyone here is disputing that. I am using a timing light on the dyno when I check the timing curve. That does make me wonder if Turk is using a timing light triggered from the plug wire on his distributor machine?Here are a couple of comments Charlie Westcott ( who I doubt anybody here will doubt his knowledge) made to me
Newbomb Turk’s comments have some validity to them, and maybe should be given a bit of respect..lol
Charlie:
“if you have a crank trigger, you are firing off the front of the crank. If you are using a pickup in the distributor, and the gear is on the back of the cam, its gonna vary some, mosty from slack in the chain/belt. your guy that monitors it on the racepak needs to know that the racepak is just monitoring the signal from the box, not reading the actual position with a light. Its meaningless. I had a guy, Steve Yantus, that never checked the timing cause the "grid said" it was at 30. I said you are an idiot, hook up a timing light. Most cars have electronics on them that the user has no business using.”
Me:
So, is it a waste of time to look at timing with a light on the dyno at different operating rpm’s and setup a timing curve based on what the timing at those rpm’s tell you?
Or isn’t it worth chasing
Charlie:
No, thats a valid test. I am saying that if you have a crank trigger, it isnt going to move unless the pickup is odd. The holley pickup I used in PS retarded the timing and you had to comp for that.