I was trying to plot a distributor advance curve for my Prestolite dual point 2642242 IBS-4013A (273 Power-Pak w/o CAP) using the specs in the 1967 Plymouth FSM.
I realize that the FSM lists the specs as "distributor degrees at distributor RPM". I also realize that the distributor rotates at 1/2 the crank speed, so you have to double the RPM figure to get the reading from your dwell tach. What I am confused about is if I also have to double the listed degrees to get crank degrees? The posts I have read on this subject suggest that I do.
The reason I am asking this is because when I plot the curves using that assumption, the total advance all-in seems to be extreme. Most discussions I have read suggest that the total advance (initial + centrifugal + vacuum) should be in the 35-40 degree range. But when I plot the factory specs, I get this: initial 10º + maximum centrifugal 20º (@1800rpm) + maximum vacuum 22º = 52º.
I wouldn't question this if it seemed to be working in real life. But running CA 10% ethanol 91 octane premium, I am getting noticeable detonation at partial throttle under load; for example, climbing the grade on 680 at Sunol at 60mph, with the vacuum gauge showing 10-12 inches. Full throttle seems to be fine, but I can't drive this thing at WOT all the time and keep my license <lol>.
For context, this is a factory Commando 273 with a Crower Baja Torquemaster hydraulic cam (very similar to the factory cam profile), bored .020, with fresh mildly ported heads. The distributor is the original 240K mile unit, with new points. 3.23 rear.
My thought was I could use a little less vacuum advance, and the vacuum advance on this distributor is theoretically adjustable — you unscrew the end of the pot and change the washer pack and/or the spring (possibly). But I can't find any references to what that actually does — does the thickness of the washer pack affect the total amount of motion of the breaker plate, or does it affect the amount of vacuum needed to move the breaker plate? I have a couple of spare distributors that I can source washers from. I don't know where you would source the springs, or find out the specs for them.
I realize that the FSM lists the specs as "distributor degrees at distributor RPM". I also realize that the distributor rotates at 1/2 the crank speed, so you have to double the RPM figure to get the reading from your dwell tach. What I am confused about is if I also have to double the listed degrees to get crank degrees? The posts I have read on this subject suggest that I do.
The reason I am asking this is because when I plot the curves using that assumption, the total advance all-in seems to be extreme. Most discussions I have read suggest that the total advance (initial + centrifugal + vacuum) should be in the 35-40 degree range. But when I plot the factory specs, I get this: initial 10º + maximum centrifugal 20º (@1800rpm) + maximum vacuum 22º = 52º.
I wouldn't question this if it seemed to be working in real life. But running CA 10% ethanol 91 octane premium, I am getting noticeable detonation at partial throttle under load; for example, climbing the grade on 680 at Sunol at 60mph, with the vacuum gauge showing 10-12 inches. Full throttle seems to be fine, but I can't drive this thing at WOT all the time and keep my license <lol>.
For context, this is a factory Commando 273 with a Crower Baja Torquemaster hydraulic cam (very similar to the factory cam profile), bored .020, with fresh mildly ported heads. The distributor is the original 240K mile unit, with new points. 3.23 rear.
My thought was I could use a little less vacuum advance, and the vacuum advance on this distributor is theoretically adjustable — you unscrew the end of the pot and change the washer pack and/or the spring (possibly). But I can't find any references to what that actually does — does the thickness of the washer pack affect the total amount of motion of the breaker plate, or does it affect the amount of vacuum needed to move the breaker plate? I have a couple of spare distributors that I can source washers from. I don't know where you would source the springs, or find out the specs for them.















