When a car is cruising, the cylinders only recieve a partial charge of air and fuel. The timing can be advanced without causing pre-ignition (pinking???). The advanced timing gives the burned gas a longer time to transmit energy, so better efficiency...at partial throttle.
Race cars do not cruise at part throttle - it's either all on or all off. If you punch the throttle with a lot of vacuum advance, the engine will rattle for a split second until the vacuum has a chance to bleed out of the actuator. That's very bad for rings,etc. For racing you mechanically set your timing as far advanced as possible without causing preignition, and you don't care about idle or coasting mileage.
Randall, I agree, as many cars ar ported "upstream" of the throttle valve - the manual Luke posted even shows this. I went out and checked my carb before I posted. Mine is not, but rather the port is located just downstream of my throttle valve. Replacement carb on mine maybe?
John