Do you feel that the timing curve should be different for 1st gear than it should be for 5th gear?
Absolutely. If timing in different gears doesn’t matter then why do some guys pull timing at the hit? Because they can’t get the car hooked so they pull timing and kill some power to get the car moving.
If the car isn’t traction limited you can ADD timing at the hit and make the car 60 foot quicker because you can use more timing on an engine that isnt loaded as hard, and I first gear the engine isnt loaded like it is in every subsequent gear as the ratios in the transmission gets higher andthe load goes up.
I know there are times where some engines with a huge amount of mixture motion can actually pull some timing out in high gear and make more power, but those are highly tuned NA engines.
So yes, the timing requirements for the engine are based on load and there is less load on the engine in low gear than in high gear. That should be evident by the fact that the engine will rpm significantly faster in,ow gear than in high gear.
Load affects timing. Change the load and the timing changes. That’s why vacuum advance should be used on anything that sees street time. Or circle track stuff.
We know that under cruise load the chamber isnt filled (lower VE) and the burn rate of that lower VE is much slower, so for maximum efficiency you add timing at a cruise with VA.
Again, this goes to why most engines need a curve. And why sweep testing won’t sort out a curve.
I watch a ton of dyno videos and I never see the operator actually do anything other than add timing across the entire curve or remove timing across the entire curve.
Nicks Garage is another example of timing nonsense. I’ve never seen him change the curve or even say what the curve is to start with. He either adds to the curve or reduces the curve.