Mattax
Just the facts, ma'am
To be frank you're throwing darts blindly. Pin the tail on the donkey without seeing the donkey.Lol I’m also just a really stubborn traditionalist because my dad grew up with mopars and holleys so I’m kind of just following the same road.
The first thing you need to do to seperate wheat from chaff is know the difference.
Go read the booklets from Chrysler on carburetor fundementals.
Its free at available at your electronic fingertips. Urich and Fisher will have to be found or ordered from ebay or 'zon so you won't get it for a week. Its not that its a great book, but the explainations in the front are some of the best I've seen. Written by guys who were engineers as opposed to enthusiatic magazine writers.
If the idle isn't right, then all of the adjustments you make from off idle on will not be right, and will have to get readjusted if you care to really tune it in. There's exception but you're driving a street truck, not a dedicated drag race car - and even there can't get away with stuff that people used to in amateur races.
really basic stuff has been skipped. timing at ______, fuel level, transfer slot exposure, idle mix adjustment, choke pull off; never mind number of e-holes and so forth.
You've been given lots of information because you keep asking questions and making assumptions. I'm not typing any more. Its pretty much all there in the various links and searches. You'll have to assemble it.
One more to help your understanding
Purpose of Timing
Mechanical or Centrifical Advance:
Compensates for the reduced amount of time (miliseconds) available for the burn as rpm increases. But because increased engine efficiency decreases burn time as rpms climb, the rate of advance is not always propertional to rpm. A 'low performance' 318 usually has good lower rpm efficiency, but does not gain as much efficiency with increasing rpm. A 'high performance engine' is usually the opossite.
Purpose of Vacuum Advance
pretty much right from Chrysler's booklets for their techs.
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