Tom and all I thought it might be worth comparing to what the factory spec would be for that year. Given of course that the engine is not a 1970 232 but the Hornet is a 1970 and I have a 1970 TSM and that is the first year that tune up specifications were considered in the light of smog criteria which did make some differences and I loaned out my 1967 TSM and do not have it back yet so!!!!!!! Ignition timing chart, page 4-30 232 all transmissions Initial timing @ 500 rpm w/vacuum hoses disconnected 3 =/- 1 BTDC Maximum Degrees Advance @ 2000 RPM w/Vacuum hoses connected 33 degrees =/- 4 Centrifugal Advance Engine RPM and Degrees, on the car. 232 I-6 900rpm 4-6 Degrees 2100 rpm 16-20 degrees Vacuum Advance Engine Degrees 232 I-6 Degrees Max Advance 22 Now the way I read this it seems to say that there is a possibility of a maximum of 42 degrees advance available at 2100+rpm with 16 to 17 inches of mercury at the vacuum can of the distributor. And of course as you start pulling a load the vacuum advance will retard the spark at any given rpm depending on the amount of load which translates into reduced vacuum until you get down to zero at which point the only advance would be mechanical and at 2100 rpm that would be 16 -20 degrees. Depending on the year of the car or the distributor, the recommended vacuum source could be either ported vacuum or manifold vacuum, and it just might be, depending on the year of the distributor the exact same distributor for each source of vacuum leaving you with a distributor that does not have as much vacuum advance available for use as ported vacuum starts out at zero inches of mercury at idle rather than 17 or so inches of mercury that manifold vacuum source does and then increases as engine rpm thus air flow through the carburetor increases. With the caveat that ported vacuum "can" be equal to but never greater than intake manifold vacuum. It does have a tendency though to be self limited to about 10 inches of mercury maximum under normal engine operation. Using ported vacuum on a distributor that was originally designed for intake manifold vacuum will cause the timing to run later longer and that is good for smog criteria but bad for fuel economy and over all performance. I believe in the very early years of smog tuned engines that was the case. As to how far or how long that was done I do not know as it has not been important to me to find out. Keep in mind that much of the smog tuning though was done so to meet the 2 or 3 min. warm up time that started when the engine was first started and then through vacuum switching circuits were shut down and did not function until the next cold start. At this time though many systems ran with intake manifold vacuum to the distributor which would advance the timing at idle to help keep the engine running, but when the engine warmed up ported vacuum was switched to the distributor vacuum canister to run the timing dynamically later. This caused increased heat of the combustion chamber. Also the mechanism changed from year to year as the criteria changed as did in some years different models had different criteria there for different hook ups to make it work. For example in 1980 8 different configurations that could exist under the hood and this does not include those Eagles that were smogged as light trucks for the state of California or any 4 cylinder variations. However one of the 1980 combinations uses a non-linear control valve that can supply as needed; Full Manifold Vacuum Ported Vacuum And aprox. a 10 inches of mercury. This gives a 3rd variation of controlled advance criteria. So the question becomes, with Toms full mechanical advance, what is his set up giving at 2100 rpm vs the factory spec for that year and engine combination and what happens when the load becomes high enough to require later or retarded timing and a rpm based advance can't supply it? Food for thought Snip I now have 32 degrees total advance -- with vacuum disconnected -- and no pinging under load. I will later this weekend plot a graph of the mechanical advance curve, but I got it road-tuned pretty close today. I'm now running 12 degrees static advance, 20 degrees mechanical, by fiddling springs got it to come in about 3200 rpm. That did the trick. Snip I too am interested in seeing what the advance curve looks like. John. _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com