Hi Arch!
Good points, and I'll try to address each for you.
>I am running a stock Olds distributor. The other day I took out the 23
degree
>advance and replaced it with the 10 degree vac advance. The only
differences
>in these two units is the length of the slot in the stationary arm. I have
>installed a shift kit in my tranny which gives me a shift point of 22 mph
in
>first gear and 42 in second gear.
So far so good- the shift points are not especially important from an
ignition timing point of view- essentially the engine should be able to
adjust its timing to suit whatever you throw at it.
>When I drop in what ever gear ratio I end
>up with this is going to put me well up in the RPMs. My thought is that I
>might
>be able to let the engine get a little more advance out of the vac unit.
All
>that would have to be done is lengthen the slot a little.
You may, here's a little explaination for you of what is happening-
The centrifugal advance is set up essentially to provide maximum advance the
engine will tolerate at FULL THROTTLE, i.e. maximum cylinder pressures. The
pressures peak at more or less the torque peak of the engine, and fall off
either side of that. Looking at a graph of torque output for an engine will
give you a very accurate idea of the relative pressures in the cylinders at
wide open throttle. Generally speaking, the centrifugal advances are
extremely well set up at the factory.
Its an idea to remove the vacuum advance hose and plug it, and set the
engine for maximum tolerable static advance or nearly so at WOT without
pinging. The factory setting is usually quite close to this. Note also,
engines develop greater sensitivity to spark knock as the temperature rises.
A feuls ability to avoid pre ignition is largely dependent upon three
factors. Temperature, Pressure, and Octane rating. Around the 225 degree
water temperature mark, the sensitivity is substantially increased in most
iron block gasoline engines. Pinging MUST be kept to an absolute minimum,
and must never occur at heavy throttle. It breaks pistons and can damage
many other parts.
Now, the vacuum advance is designed to take advantage of the substatially
lower peak cylinder pressures at part throttle operation. When a cylinder is
not operating at maximum pressure, the engine can tolerate considerably
greater spark advance and reap the benefits of cooler operation, greater
economy and greater power. The problem is always finding a Vacuum Advance
unit that does not overdo it. This usually calls for a bit of
experimentation. Bear in mind also, altitude plays a big part. At higher
altitudes, the peak pressures are somewhat lower, and you may discover a
engine that works perfectly in high altitude knocks and runs poorly at sea
level.
Anyhow, basically, the order to calibrate the engine is, is tune for the
worst.
Use 87 octane fuel, at the lowest altitude you normally encounter, set the
timing to spec, or as advanced and as close to it as possible with the VA
disconnected for ZERO knocking on a hot engine at FULL THROTTLE.
Next, advance the timing from this point four-six degrees. Hook up the VA
unit again. If the engine is not on the hairy fringe of knocking as you
drive at light throttle, you need a more agressive VA. If it does knock at
light throttle, but it diminishes at very heavy throttle, your VA is too
agressive. The ideal VA would keep the engine on the verge of knocking all
the time with the initial advance slightly to far ahead. The idea is to have
a responsive VA that is just a little less agressive than the engine can
stand. Naturally, reset the initial advance back where we wanted it when
thru.
If you can find one that meets these criteria, you'll be very happy with it.
I buy all the ones off similar distributors I encounter and experiement to
match whatever vehicle I'm driving. One advantage I enjoy is living at sea
level, if it doesn't knock here, it is never going to elsewhere;-) Even two
identical model and part numbers Vacuum Advance units can differ
substantially due to production variances.
> Add to that the use
>of
>premium gas and I might even be able to go back to the 23 degree advance
>and get much better gas mileage. All of this is just theory right now. All
I
>know
>for sure right now is that the only pinging I was getting with the 23
degree
>advance was when I crowed it in third----but I am real lite right now since
>there is nothing in the coach. Sure would like to hear your thoughts.
I think one real benefit of the numerically high axle ratio is the lessened
strain and load on the engine will permit cruising at substantially higher
vacuum readings, which will bring the VA back on line. Driving with 14-18"
HG Vacuum at a few hundred RPM more is desirable if it means the distributor
can advance and the carb enrichment circuit remains inoperational more
often.
I wouldn't use premium or tune for it. The 455 is not touch and go by any
means and can make the maximum power on 87 if its tuned well. You're very
near that point already. Also, if something does go wrong, and you for
example got sold some real no-test bad gas, being tuned for 87 will leave
you some options, such as throwing some premium in to boost the bad stuff.
>I agree with you on the higher gears. But that seems to be something that
>is not all that good here. When I look at some of these motorhomes
>running a 454 geared in the low to mid 4s I wonder what we are doing.
>There was one article about combining a Caspro chain set with some of
>these gear sets to get you to a 3.9 I think it was. That looked interesting
You are correct in noticing Brand "X" motorhomes on Chevy 454 Chassis use
4.10-4.88 ratios frequently.
There are in my opinion a few reasons for this, primary reason is most use
quite a bit larger tire (larger tires have fewer revolutions per mile) than
the GMC, and hence need a higher ratio to get the same results. Also, most
SOB's are less aerodynamic, have greater weights and more rolling resistance
due to inherent inefficiencies like dual rear wheels and tall chassis
configurations. In short, they need all the help they can get.
There are some differences in the Olds 455 and Chevy 454 engines also, as
used in the two Chassis types. Olds has left thier engine in passenger car
tune essentially, and hasn't really recalibrated it beyond stripping out a
few emissions control devices. The Chevy 454 in the Motorhome Chassis is a
heavy duty engine, purpose built to be slow and steady in its performance,
and have an extra flat torque curve. 454 engines came in several versions,
the 454 versioon representing closest overall equivalent of the 455
Oldsmobile in a GMC is Chevrolet's LS5 option, essentially a run of the mill
1971-72 Chevy Caprice engine.
The contrast between the Motorhome 454 and 455 GMC is essentially that the
455 is more like car to drive. It has greater horsepower, and likes to rev
a little more than the 454.
Basically, as long as you arent geared so short you are continously
operating over about 3500 rpm at the abslute highest cruise speed you expect
to drive, you wont hurt anything. Gearing so that the bulk of your cruising
mileage occurs at or slightly below the torque peak (~2400-2800 rpm) will
usually yeild the best overal fuel consumption.
I personally will want at least a 3.64 for any GMC I get. The Caspro
PowerDrive chain looks like a helluva nce arrangement, lower ratio with no
tradeoffs elsewhere( except $$ I guess!) . If I could get a 3.73 or 3.89
etc, I'd be sorely tempted to do so.
Thanks for the kind remarks Arch! Hope this is food for thought
Brent Covey
Vancouver