Compression ratio and cylinder head efficiency and material is what determines how much total timing is needed more than camshaft, intake, carburetor than all the other things listed.
Uhhhhh, not really.
Compression certainly affects the AMOUNT of timing you need.
If by cylinder head efficiency you mean combustion chamber efficiency then yes, it has an effect on timing. Spark plug location is far more critical than chamber shape.
Cylinder head materiel has ZERO affect on timing. None.
Camshaft has as much to do with timing and especially the curve as the other things mentioned.
Where the engine makes peak torque and power has a major effect on what the timing curve looks like.
An engine with peak torque at 3500 and peak power at 5000 won’t have the same CURVE as an engine that makes peak torque at 5200 and peak power at 6800. They won’t even be close.
This is what guys are missing. Peak torque and power want totally different timing. That’s the physics of it.
Of course, if we go down the rabbit hole of slew rate, I can definitively say that 99% of the guys running locked out or all in by 2500 have no clue what their timing is at peak torque and power.
That’s giving up power. All this is easily provable.















