petnatcar
Senior Member

Offline
Hi Guys,
Since rebuilding my engine (in 2000) I must use racing fuel in order to keep it from "pinging" under acceleration.
I made the mistake of running some 91 non ethanol with Lucas octane booster and was surprised how poorly the engine ran. It pinged so bad I was afraid to drive the car even after retarding the ignition.
During the rebuild the block was decked and the head was milled thus raising the compression ratio to the point where the engine runs best on a mixture of high test fuel.
The actual ratio for the fuel is 5 gallons of 110 oct to 7 gallons of 93 oct.
Although this is expensive the engine runs perfectly and sounds like a race engine.
My question is; do the stock distributor advance settings still apply for a high compression engine?
I monitor the condition of the plugs (Champion N12Y) which are burning cleanly but I haven't been able to accurately set the distributor with my timing light. I've gone more by 'sight and sound' to arrive at this setting but I can't help thinking I can get a little more power from the engine with the ignition set exactly where it should be.
I am using a Crane XR700 Ignition System which also works perfectly, especially in the upper rev range.
As a side note:
I did a compression test in 2008 and came up with average readings of 192 psi dry and 201 psi wet!
Original spec is 175 psi.
Any suggestions on finding the perfect ignition setting?
Thanks,
Peter
Since rebuilding my engine (in 2000) I must use racing fuel in order to keep it from "pinging" under acceleration.
I made the mistake of running some 91 non ethanol with Lucas octane booster and was surprised how poorly the engine ran. It pinged so bad I was afraid to drive the car even after retarding the ignition.
During the rebuild the block was decked and the head was milled thus raising the compression ratio to the point where the engine runs best on a mixture of high test fuel.
The actual ratio for the fuel is 5 gallons of 110 oct to 7 gallons of 93 oct.
Although this is expensive the engine runs perfectly and sounds like a race engine.
My question is; do the stock distributor advance settings still apply for a high compression engine?
I monitor the condition of the plugs (Champion N12Y) which are burning cleanly but I haven't been able to accurately set the distributor with my timing light. I've gone more by 'sight and sound' to arrive at this setting but I can't help thinking I can get a little more power from the engine with the ignition set exactly where it should be.
I am using a Crane XR700 Ignition System which also works perfectly, especially in the upper rev range.
As a side note:
I did a compression test in 2008 and came up with average readings of 192 psi dry and 201 psi wet!
Original spec is 175 psi.
Any suggestions on finding the perfect ignition setting?
Thanks,
Peter