yeah, I wasn't expecting the cooper s map to be anywhere near right for my motor, just trying to broaden my understanding...
Yes, do need to get it on a dyno, haven't had it on one with this ignition. My guru is too busy to give me some time on it
spraycanmansam wrote:
Ah correct me if im wrong but you'll still have the same amount of total advance, non?
Just for reference, I run two different setups in my ute...
I run 5 deg static advance at all times. In summer I run the vac advance directly off the manifold and adjust the idle down to suit. This gives me ~15 deg more advance on idle which helps it keep cooler. In winter I have the vac adv work off the port on the carb (no vac advance at idle) to help it warm up as the manifold vacuum setup takes ages to heat up on a cold night.
With either setup I still have the same total advance.
yes, with either setup there you still have the same total advance, because both situations are using the vacuum advance. But if you disconnected the vacuum advance and locked off the vacuum advance plate, then you'd only have the mechanical advance - which would be less total advance than either of your setups
Quote:
I was always under the assumption the vac advance job was to give you more advance under low load situations, ie: idle, highway cruising for better economy.
yep, that's what it's for.... lots of advance to make the best of a small amount of fuel. Holden's research (I think for SIDI) found that the engine only needs to produce 8kw to make a Commodore cruise at 100kph, so they cut the fuel to nothing, advance it till it's about to run backwards, then turn it all forward a bit - hello amazing fuel economy, but of course when accelerating it's still a 2 tonne slug