TR6oldtimer
Darth Vader
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I was reading through an article on TIMING AND VACUUM ADVANCE. The author pointed out that the centrifugal advance was a function of engine RPM and advances the firing point as RPM increases to compensate for the faster piston speed in relation to the "steady" burn time of the fuel/air mixture, thereby keeping the maximum combustion pressure in the sweet spot. This makes sense to me.
He went on to describe that a lean mixture, which occurs with high intake manifold pressure, burns slower then a rich mixture. So, to keep the maximum combustion pressure in the sweet spot, you need to advance the spark when the mixture is lean, which is the purpose of a vacuum advance. Again, this makes sense to me.
So, with higher intake vacuum, you have a leaner mixture and need more advance. When you open the throttle, vacuum drops, the mixture becomes richer, so the spark is retarded. That is the vacuum advance decreases with a lower manifold pressure. Again, this makes sense to me.
This is what I find to be counter intuitive. My '73 has only a vacuum retard that is always in play unless a high engine coolant situation is encountered, and then it is disabled. So, when you open the inlet valves, it creates a lower manifold pressure, which means a richer mixture, a faster fuel burn time, implying the timing needs to be retarded. The '73 setup ADVANCES the timing (lower vacuum, less retard).
Here is the spec on the vacuum retard:
No retard before 2 1/2 inHg. Fully retarded, 7+/- 1 deg. at 10 inHg.
It seems to me, this engine setup is deliberately retarding the timing to lower NOX at the expense of peak performance.
Is my assumption correct, or what am I missing?
The article:
https://www.corvette-restoration.com/resources/technical_papers/Timing101.pdf
He went on to describe that a lean mixture, which occurs with high intake manifold pressure, burns slower then a rich mixture. So, to keep the maximum combustion pressure in the sweet spot, you need to advance the spark when the mixture is lean, which is the purpose of a vacuum advance. Again, this makes sense to me.
So, with higher intake vacuum, you have a leaner mixture and need more advance. When you open the throttle, vacuum drops, the mixture becomes richer, so the spark is retarded. That is the vacuum advance decreases with a lower manifold pressure. Again, this makes sense to me.
This is what I find to be counter intuitive. My '73 has only a vacuum retard that is always in play unless a high engine coolant situation is encountered, and then it is disabled. So, when you open the inlet valves, it creates a lower manifold pressure, which means a richer mixture, a faster fuel burn time, implying the timing needs to be retarded. The '73 setup ADVANCES the timing (lower vacuum, less retard).
Here is the spec on the vacuum retard:
No retard before 2 1/2 inHg. Fully retarded, 7+/- 1 deg. at 10 inHg.
It seems to me, this engine setup is deliberately retarding the timing to lower NOX at the expense of peak performance.
Is my assumption correct, or what am I missing?
The article:
https://www.corvette-restoration.com/resources/technical_papers/Timing101.pdf
Hi Guest!
smilie in place of the real @
Pretty Please - add it to our Events forum(s) and add to the calendar! >> 

Yep, if I were in your situation, I would do that as well...