I can’t say what RPM for certain. It’s not my car. The OP needs to determine that, these are all suggestions & estimates to try and help him.At what rpm? Without rpm your numbers make zero sense
I can’t say what RPM for certain. It’s not my car. The OP needs to determine that, these are all suggestions & estimates to try and help him.At what rpm? Without rpm your numbers make zero sense
Turk,
The historical facts speak for themselves.....& the facts cannot be altered by you or me.
So, the advance curve is programmed into the MSD atm with the distributor locked, is that correct?MSD Digital Ignition with 38 Degrees Ignition Timing
Fuel Pump
Turk,
I don't care what you asked me. As already stated, racers have for decades locked their ign timing...& run faster. If you are not sure how it works, ask them.....
I was wondering how long it would take for you to spout the ignorance comment or similar because that is all you have.
The one thing you have said that is correct: you cannot change physics. You also cannot change history & history has the runs on the board...
The hole you are figging is getting bigger...
Turk,
This thread is about total engine timing, & that is what I am talking about. I am not derailing anything, except for maybe the BS train....
And now you say you locked the timing on YOUR engine & went quicker? That is what I am saying, so what are we arguing about? There is only ONE quicker, not quicker quicker. I run a locked dist [ 35* ] on my engine which is street driven. Been that way for about 18 yrs, & idles at 48* using MVA.
The internet is full of examples of people that have gone faster....with locked timing.
I’m pretty sure the distributor is locked at 38 degs, but he is pulling timing out with the box. The box can only delay the timing event. So mechanically the distributor is locked at the highest advance point you would want the engine to ever see. Then based on RPM or time, the box pulls a programmed amount of timing. Which is here nor there. I know LA’s are very sensitive to timing and 38 is a ton. I would start at 30 then run it, add 2 degs until it loses MPH. Then back up 2 degs. MSD actually tells you to lock the distributor if you want to run 10 degrees or less mechanical advance. Kinda silly bandaid.
I am not f/up another thread because all my comments are relevant to the topic. Nice try by you to protect your b/**** comments. Several people on THIS THREAD other than me have supported locked timing, just the amount varies.
You haven't presented any 'facts & physics', just your opinion....which we get so often..& is WRONG.
And then you introduce slew rates/reading timing lights into the thread when the thread is about locked timing...& you have the gall/stupidity to accuse me of derailing the thread!
Was wondering how the cam profiles interacts with the ignition timing required.... any information for my own knowledge and understanding would be highly appreciated.Two things. With aluminum heads and under 12:1 with that cam, there's no way in heck you need locked out timing and at 38 degrees. Secondly, there's no way you need race gas. You're wasting your money with a bad tune.
This is exactly the way my MSD box and locked distributor are functioning.I’m pretty sure the distributor is locked at 38 degs, but he is pulling timing out with the box. The box can only delay the timing event. So mechanically the distributor is locked at the highest advance point you would want the engine to ever see. Then based on RPM or time, the box pulls a programmed amount of timing. Which is here nor there. I know LA’s are very sensitive to timing and 38 is a ton. I would start at 30 then run it, add 2 degs until it loses MPH. Then back up 2 degs. MSD actually tells you to lock the distributor if you want to run 10 degrees or less mechanical advance. Kinda silly bandaid.
The camshaft directly affects cylinder pressure. Cylinder pressure directly affects timing curve.Was wondering how the cam profiles interacts with the ignition timing required.... any information for my own knowledge and understanding would be highly appreciated.
The camshaft directly affects cylinder pressure. Cylinder pressure directly affects timing curve.