Matt recently posted that I had once made a timing pointer for my distributor.
It is shown here:
http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/timing-marks-for-distributor/p1451.html http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/timing-marks-for-distributor/p1451.html
I found that this was very accurate for adjusting my timing.
When I lived at Santa Fe at an altitude of 7200 feet I found that I could advance the distributor anywhere and not get pinging.
At high elevations I found that advancing the distributor gave me much more power.
So I would have it at 25 degrees in the mountains but would have to lower it when traveling.
When I got down to, say 3000 feet, I would drop it to about 15 degrees. When I got to California close to sea level I would put it at 8 or 10 to prevent pinging.
This was all before I had a fuel injection controlled distributor with spark control.
I no longer use the original distributor.
Emery Stora
77 Kingsley
Frederick, CO
>
>> Advancing timing really is indirectly affected by altitude.
>>
>> What I an trying to say is as you reduce the air charge (amount of air) in the cylinders at any altitude you can / should advance the timing.
>> This reduced air charge at altitude can be simulated at sea level by not opening the throttle plates in the carb all the way.
>>
>> What is suppose to happen is the vacuum advance / retard is suppose to automatically adjust the timing when the air charge is reduced. It seems
>> to me if you are having to change the advance the static timing at altitude for reduce air charge, then the vacuum advance and static timing are
>> incorrect for the situation. Maybe what you ought to be looking at a different vacuum advance and static setting to make the whole system automatic
>> for all levels of air charge and altitudes.
>>
>> Maybe I'm looking at it wrong.
>>
>> We are controlling the advance by engine vacuum where it probably should be controlled by the amount of air drawn into the cylinders. I do not
>> know how you do that with a non-computer ignition system.
>
> Ken,
>
> You and most of the rest of the world has fallen (I was there once) into the trap set that was set by carburetor engineer over a century ago. I
> actually had a semester long class called "Fluids". I still remember seeing all the equations that said that a venturi was a mass flow device
> (M-dot). Therefore, altitude should be a non-issue. That was nice and I believed it for the next twenty years. Then I had to write reports on work
> done in a real carburetor flow lab. That was where it was demonstrated to me that the introduction of a throttle plate, a choke plate, an airfilter,
> a curvy intake manifold and pulsed flow (M-double dot)throw that all right our the window. They become much closer to a volumetric device (V-dot) and
> they aren't really very good at that. So, they also don't deliver the correct fuel for the different conditions.
>
> Ego, they will not deliver the correct signal to the timing controlled by vacuum devices and with the ambient P less than sea level, they can't even
> guess what the real MAP (Manifold Absolute Pressure) and as such can't even begin to guess what the cylinder charge pressure (pressure when the intake
> closes) actually is.
>
> Emery had a good idea years ago (and I cannot locate the picture) where he (before his ECM install) had a pointer on the distributor so he could
> quickly reset the base timing. A great idea, but an ECM with Knock Sense and timing control is better.
>
> Matt
> --
> Matt & Mary Colie - Members GMCMI, GMCGL, GMCES
> '73 Glacier 23 - Still Loving OE Rear Drum Brake with Applied Control Arms
> Now with both true Keyless and remote entry
> SE Michigan - Twixt A2 and Detroit
>
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