OK, thanks Nick! What you say makes sense to me. Yeah, is a few HP worth running on the ragged edge on the street? Probably not. So a few extra degrees might gain very few percent increase at the risk of destruction. I get your point -- racing with a tuned and instrumented motor, 1% is a good gamble. Thanks, I'll stay away from the cliff's edge! I've always wanted to tune spark with a pyrometer, it seems like the right way to set timing. Thanks again! On Tue, Oct 20, 2009 at 20:47, Nick ALFANO <71amx@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Tom, > > I am blushing at the accolades but I don't claim to be an expert. > > On a stock engine, the returns are not going to be that noticeable when you > are talking 34 degree Vs 36. Someone said NASCAR guys say they run best > just before the blow. That is pretty much true (ever notice your grass > trimmer or leaf blower seems to get a boost in power just before it runs out > of gas). The most power your engine is going to produce is going to be as > lean as possible with the most timing it will take before it explodes. > Basically, the more heat you can produce in the combustion chamber, the more > power you will be creating. This also means the closer you are to a melt > down. The problem with detonation in a stock engine is most often it is > going to happen when the engine is under load and doesn't have enough power > to work through it quickly. Every revolution under this condition until it > moves into an RPM where it is making power more freely, especially with cast > pistons, the closer you are to disaster. Don't > chance it with cast pistons. The difference in 1 or 2 degrees is not > going to be worth much. If at 36 degrees of total timing you have > detonation, back it off a degree at a time or throw more fuel at it until it > goes away (slight detonation is hard to hear with headers and dual > exhaust). The balance between fuel and timing is key to hp and hard to > achieve without some sort of monitor like a dyno with sensors looking at the > fuel/air as well as power graph, blips in the chart that might indicate > detonation, fuel consumption and or exhaust temps across the power band. I > have seen engines where all cylinders look great except one where the > exhaust temps were 100 degree more than the others telling me that hole > wasn't getting at much fuel as the others. My suggestion to you for a some > what stock engine on the street is, find your spot just before detonation > while getting a nice read on the fuel mixture by your plugs a little towards > the lean > side. Run that tune only when racing. For the street, back it off a > degree or two more and not as lean for normal street driving. The > difference is only going to be a few hp that you most likely wont even > feel. The flip side is running on the edge, it only takes one tank of > bad gas or a hot day to push you towards a melt down that will be costly for > what, maybe 5hp. Not worth it. > . > > Good luck > > Nick > Alfano Performance > 4849-76 st. > Kenosha, WI. 53142 > 262-308-1302 > 262-942-8271 after 6pm central and weekends > > > Message: 6 > Date: Mon, 19 Oct 2009 21:30:07 -0700 > From: tom jennings <tomj@xxxxxxx> > To: "AMC, Rambler, Nash, Jeep and family" <amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > Subject: [AMC-list] spark lead question for tuning experts like Nick > Alfano... > Message-ID: > <c81e13650910192130x47686fbt606221cdfbb4b80b@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" > > Someone with dyno experience ought to know this stuff by the seat of their > pants, me I'm stabbing in the dark... > > When you have a motor dialed in, just how sensitive is it to ignition lead > timing when it's under heavy load? In other words, if you have the timing > dialed in reasonably close, how many degrees away is detonation? How much > power is lost is it's retarded another degree or two or three? > > I know it will vary with combustion chamber and compression and a whole > slew > of factors. But for "sort of stock" or stock motors, how touchy is maximum > ignition timing, power-wise? > > Bottom line is, how close to detonation should one push timing before it's > a > waste of time? > > _______________________________________________ > AMC-list mailing list > AMC-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx > http://list.amc-list.com/listinfo.cgi/amc-list-amc-list.com > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://list.amc-list.com/pipermail/amc-list-amc-list.com/attachments/20091020/a69f6c6a/attachment.htm> _______________________________________________ AMC-list mailing list AMC-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://list.amc-list.com/listinfo.cgi/amc-list-amc-list.com