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Timing & Vacuum Advance 101

129K views 118 replies 38 participants last post by  JOEROSE396  
#1 · (Edited by Moderator)
As many of you are aware, timing and vacuum advance is one of my favorite subjects, as I was involved in the development of some of those systems in my GM days and I understand it. Many people don't, as there has been very little written about it anywhere that makes sense, and as a result, a lot of folks are under the misunderstanding that vacuum advance somehow compromises performance. Nothing could be further from the truth. I finally sat down the other day and wrote up a primer on the subject, with the objective of helping more folks to understand vacuum advance and how it works together with initial timing and centrifugal advance to optimize all-around operation and performance. I have this as a Word document if anyone wants it sent to them - I've cut-and-pasted it here; it's long, but hopefully it's also informative.

TIMING AND VACUUM ADVANCE 101

The most important concept to understand is that lean mixtures, such as at idle and steady highway cruise, take longer to burn than rich mixtures; idle in particular, as idle mixture is affected by exhaust gas dilution. This requires that lean mixtures have "the fire lit" earlier in the compression cycle (spark timing advanced), allowing more burn time so that peak cylinder pressure is reached just after TDC for peak efficiency and reduced exhaust gas temperature (wasted combustion energy). Rich mixtures, on the other hand, burn faster than lean mixtures, so they need to have "the fire lit" later in the compression cycle (spark timing retarded slightly) so maximum cylinder pressure is still achieved at the same point after TDC as with the lean mixture, for maximum efficiency.

The centrifugal advance system in a distributor advances spark timing purely as a function of engine rpm (irrespective of engine load or operating conditions), with the amount of advance and the rate at which it comes in determined by the weights and springs on top of the autocam mechanism. The amount of advance added by the distributor, combined with initial static timing, is "total timing" (i.e., the 34-36 degrees at high rpm that most SBC's like). Vacuum advance has absolutely nothing to do with total timing or performance, as when the throttle is opened, manifold vacuum drops essentially to zero, and the vacuum advance drops out entirely; it has no part in the "total timing" equation.

At idle, the engine needs additional spark advance in order to fire that lean, diluted mixture earlier in order to develop maximum cylinder pressure at the proper point, so the vacuum advance can (connected to manifold vacuum, not "ported" vacuum - more on that aberration later) is activated by the high manifold vacuum, and adds about 15 degrees of spark advance, on top of the initial static timing setting (i.e., if your static timing is at 10 degrees, at idle it's actually around 25 degrees with the vacuum advance connected). The same thing occurs at steady-state highway cruise; the mixture is lean, takes longer to burn, the load on the engine is low, the manifold vacuum is high, so the vacuum advance is again deployed, and if you had a timing light set up so you could see the balancer as you were going down the highway, you'd see about 50 degrees advance (10 degrees initial, 20-25 degrees from the centrifugal advance, and 15 degrees from the vacuum advance) at steady-state cruise (it only takes about 40 horsepower to cruise at 50mph).

When you accelerate, the mixture is instantly enriched (by the accelerator pump, power valve, etc.), burns faster, doesn't need the additional spark advance, and when the throttle plates open, manifold vacuum drops, and the vacuum advance can returns to zero, retarding the spark timing back to what is provided by the initial static timing plus the centrifugal advance provided by the distributor at that engine rpm; the vacuum advance doesn't come back into play until you back off the gas and manifold vacuum increases again as you return to steady-state cruise, when the mixture again becomes lean.

The key difference is that centrifugal advance (in the distributor autocam via weights and springs) is purely rpm-sensitive; nothing changes it except changes in rpm. Vacuum advance, on the other hand, responds to engine load and rapidly-changing operating conditions, providing the correct degree of spark advance at any point in time based on engine load, to deal with both lean and rich mixture conditions. By today's terms, this was a relatively crude mechanical system, but it did a good job of optimizing engine efficiency, throttle response, fuel economy, and idle cooling, with absolutely ZERO effect on wide-open throttle performance, as vacuum advance is inoperative under wide-open throttle conditions. In modern cars with computerized engine controllers, all those sensors and the controller change both mixture and spark timing 50 to 100 times per second, and we don't even HAVE a distributor any more - it's all electronic.

Now, to the widely-misunderstood manifold-vs.-ported vacuum aberration. After 30-40 years of controlling vacuum advance with full manifold vacuum, along came emissions requirements, years before catalytic converter technology had been developed, and all manner of crude band-aid systems were developed to try and reduce hydrocarbons and oxides of nitrogen in the exhaust stream. One of these band-aids was "ported spark", which moved the vacuum pickup orifice in the carburetor venturi from below the throttle plate (where it was exposed to full manifold vacuum at idle) to above the throttle plate, where it saw no manifold vacuum at all at idle. This meant the vacuum advance was inoperative at idle (retarding spark timing from its optimum value), and these applications also had VERY low initial static timing (usually 4 degrees or less, and some actually were set at 2 degrees AFTER TDC). This was done in order to increase exhaust gas temperature (due to "lighting the fire late") to improve the effectiveness of the "afterburning" of hydrocarbons by the air injected into the exhaust manifolds by the A.I.R. system; as a result, these engines ran like crap, and an enormous amount of wasted heat energy was transferred through the exhaust port walls into the coolant, causing them to run hot at idle - cylinder pressure fell off, engine temperatures went up, combustion efficiency went down the drain, and fuel economy went down with it.

If you look at the centrifugal advance calibrations for these "ported spark, late-timed" engines, you'll see that instead of having 20 degrees of advance, they had up to 34 degrees of advance in the distributor, in order to get back to the 34-36 degrees "total timing" at high rpm wide-open throttle to get some of the performance back. The vacuum advance still worked at steady-state highway cruise (lean mixture = low emissions), but it was inoperative at idle, which caused all manner of problems - "ported vacuum" was strictly an early, pre-converter crude emissions strategy, and nothing more.

What about the Harry high-school non-vacuum advance polished billet "whizbang" distributors you see in the Summit and Jeg's catalogs? They're JUNK on a street-driven car, but some people keep buying them because they're "race car" parts, so they must be "good for my car" - they're NOT. "Race cars" run at wide-open throttle, rich mixture, full load, and high rpm all the time, so they don't need a system (vacuum advance) to deal with the full range of driving conditions encountered in street operation. Anyone driving a street-driven car without manifold-connected vacuum advance is sacrificing idle cooling, throttle response, engine efficiency, and fuel economy, probably because they don't understand what vacuum advance is, how it works, and what it's for - there are lots of long-time experienced "mechanics" who don't understand the principles and operation of vacuum advance either, so they're not alone.

Vacuum advance calibrations are different between stock engines and modified engines, especially if you have a lot of cam and have relatively low manifold vacuum at idle. Most stock vacuum advance cans aren’t fully-deployed until they see about 15” Hg. Manifold vacuum, so those cans don’t work very well on a modified engine; with less than 15” Hg. at a rough idle, the stock can will “dither” in and out in response to the rapidly-changing manifold vacuum, constantly varying the amount of vacuum advance, which creates an unstable idle. Modified engines with more cam that generate less than 15” Hg. of vacuum at idle need a vacuum advance can that’s fully-deployed at least 1”, preferably 2” of vacuum less than idle vacuum level so idle advance is solid and stable; the Echlin #VC-1810 advance can (about $10 at NAPA) provides the same amount of advance as the stock can (15 degrees), but is fully-deployed at only 8” of vacuum, so there is no variation in idle timing even with a stout cam.

For peak engine performance, driveability, idle cooling and efficiency in a street-driven car, you need vacuum advance, connected to full manifold vacuum. Absolutely. Positively. Don't ask Summit or Jeg's about it – they don’t understand it, they're on commission, and they want to sell "race car" parts.
 
#3 ·
i have the original 302 in my 68z with the off road cam and headers. i can adjust everything after start and it runs great. if i take for a drive say 1/2 hour the idles higher seams everything is screwed up. i have checked for a vac leak none found. could this be my problem. do i need a different can? the distributer was rebuilt on a sun machine but maybe they installed a stock can? hopefully this is the problem.
 
#5 ·
Are you letting it get warm before adjusting? It doesn't sound like it. Try adjusting it after the drive but don't expect it to act the same cold as it does warm. If it can be tuned to be consistant when warm you can then work on the choke and how fast the engine warms up...
 
#4 ·
Good read, very understandable, that is, if you're running a stock GM distributor and your motor requires the special #VC-1810 advance can!.....But what about the guys that are running aftermarket distributors, with adjustable vacuum advance canisters, such as Mallory and Accel distributors?.....According to Mallory tech, the fix for these vacuum cans, if your motor is producing low vacuum, is to limit the amount of vacuum advance to 8 degrees, which would be the same as running a #VC-1810 in a stock GM distributor!
 
#6 ·
Truly a great writeup. I was in Napa the other day and they told me the Echlin VC-1810 advance can is not a part # / discontinued. Does anyone know the replacement for it?
 
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#10 · (Edited)
Great explanation of distributor adavnce with vac - very helpful and will use in my current build! Thanks for posting John! Can you also provide some explanation of how things balance between mechanical and vacumn advance at higher RPM curising and transition between partial throttle at say 3500 RPM and partial accelleration from that point? Seems at this RPM total advance will be both initial plus vac, plus mechanical and under partial increase throttle the vacumn won't drop much so there might be some knocking? Is that offset by the increased RPM and burn time essentially delaying the max power to ATDC?
 
#12 ·
You'd be surprised how much vacuum drops with partial throttle application; mixture is enriched instantly, the richer mixture burns faster, so you don't need the additional advance the VAC provided at constant throttle.

If you get some pinging with slight throttle application at 3500 rpm, you've got too much timing in it - either take some out or slow down the centrifugal curve.

:beers:
 
#13 ·
Execlent explanation John...

Good read, very understandable, that is, if you're running a stock GM distributor and your motor requires the special #VC-1810 advance can!.....But what about the guys that are running aftermarket distributors, with adjustable vacuum advance canisters, such as Mallory and Accel distributors?.....According to Mallory tech, the fix for these vacuum cans, if your motor is producing low vacuum, is to limit the amount of vacuum advance to 8 degrees, which would be the same as running a #VC-1810 in a stock GM distributor!
Every engine is slightly different so the rate of advance amount of advance, starting piont are all different...Hence why the aftermarket guys make them adjustable, and the car manufactures have literally 100os of combos for diff cams , diffs, car weights etc

And the same goes for adjustable VA units...vac ranges, start finish point and amounts of degrees

John has made and excellent explanation on the basic principles, it is not and explanation on how to dial in your curves...and that is still the same regarless if the dizzy is a stock unit or an aftermarket unit.

Its like shooting a deer on the run, at diffent speeds there is different lead time, then one also calculates the cross wind.....Spot on the deer drops dead, bit off, the deer will still be killed, after a couple hrs hiking to track it down.
Way off the deer is wounded and may survive...same as way off timing the car may cough and splutter but not run.

Going to do the next installment John....how to dial in the cent curve
Then dial in the VA.

Have you done any work on sb lpg/propane engines?
 
#21 ·
I'm not familiar with how the Edelbrocks are ported, but you want it connected to whichever port provides full manifold vacuum (sometimes called "full-time" vacuum) at idle, not the one that's a "ported" vacuum source, with little or no vacuum at idle. :)

:beers:
 
#16 ·
John Z,..beautifully written, especially the advice regarding vacuum advance on the street. I couldn't agree more. There are a half dozen reasons to run it,..no good reason not to (for street apps).

For clarification, I thought, vacuum advance was 'turned off' at WOT because of higher cylinder pressures and combustion chamber heat, both of which conspire to cause pre-ignition (pinging, knocking, etc).

Your experience and research says it's more to do with AF ratio and the speed with which different AF ratios will burn.

We may be in agreement,..cause and effect.

Can you expound?
 
#17 ·
For clarification, I thought, vacuum advance was 'turned off' at WOT because of higher cylinder pressures and combustion chamber heat, both of which conspire to cause pre-ignition (pinging, knocking, etc).

QUOTE]

Vacuum advance is "turned off" during wide open throttle because there is no vacuum in the manifold .
 
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#18 ·
Thanks NB,..yes, very low vacuum conditions remove vacuum advance functionality.

But the question above wasn't how VA was 'turned off', but why.

John Z believes it's necessary for differing burns speeds of differing AF ratios.

I thought it had more to do with combustion temps and pressure caused by WOT coupled with load, which produce pre-ignition.

I'm thinking we both may be right but wanted his angle.

John Z,..you still out there?
 
#20 ·
Thanks NB,..yes, very low vacuum conditions remove vacuum advance functionality.

But the question above wasn't how VA was 'turned off', but why.

John Z believes it's necessary for differing burns speeds of differing AF ratios.

I thought it had more to do with combustion temps and pressure caused by WOT coupled with load, which produce pre-ignition.

I'm thinking we both may be right but wanted his angle.
I think I know what you are saying. You are saying that that the amount of advance at any given time is dictated by combustion temps and pressure (true), but that is not looking at the big picture.

Engineers had to develop a mechanical system that would manipulate spark timing over a wide range of load and give the best possible gas mileage. If they were only concerned with power at WOT, there would be no need for VA.
It's cruising at very light load where you need a lot more advance because the mixture is lean (for gas mileage) and needs more time to burn.

And I'm just repeating what JohnZ has so eloquently written......
 
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#19 ·
John Z believes it's necessary for differing burns speeds of differing AF ratios.

I thought it had more to do with combustion temps and pressure caused by WOT coupled with load, which produce pre-ignition.
John doesnt believe..he knows, this is not a document of opinion, its a doc of what actually is
a/f, compresion/ octane/chamber design/engine load/rpm all influence burn speed and the required advance needed.
 
#27 ·
JohnZ;

I'm posting this just to give testament to what you have stated here. I implemented the change to full manifold vacuum and adjusted the timing and mixture on my GMPP 350 / 350 hp crate motor with FAST EzEFI and what a difference! Smoother idle, more responsive throttle, cooler and better mileage. I'm in Denver and the engines run lean to start with up here and my idle was always unstable. Now, it sits at 750 without much variation with 12 deg static / 25 deg with 13 " vacuum. 36 deg total timing w/o vacuum. Air Fuel ratios at idle = 13.8:1 AF, 14.8:1 at cruise and 13.8:1 WOT....all on regular gas.... lovin it!

Thanks John!!!

Bob
 
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#28 ·
Air Fuel ratios at idle = 13.8:1 AF, 14.8:1 at cruise and 13.8:1 WOT....all on regular gas.... lovin it!
For petrol you are looking at around 14.6 /14.7
The idle can be leaned out a little... within reason, lean mixtures require more advance. At least 115.1 to about 15.3....big economy savings to be made while sitting at interections.
Cruise again can be leaned out further...that is the basic concept of the VA add a few degs of advance for the leaner cruise mixture....u are only looking at 10 to 15 hp requirement to cruise...so around 15.1 to 15.3

Under power WOT dont even risk leaning..hi temps /kill engines
And more power is made with a far more richer mixture...getting down into the 11.5 to 12.5 AFR range....the richer the mixture...withing reason gives more power.

If messing around with data loggers /AFRs get the timing in ball park, re jet/powervalves etc the carb.....fine tune the timing curves and VA....MAY have to re set the catb again.. but generally once at this stage mixtures are pretty spot on... or close enough for a good street machine....influences like ambiant temps altitude will have more influnence from this point.
 
#29 ·
I understand the vacuum advance at idle and high vacuum part throtle helping with the cooling and performance. But just a thought/question, since my combination is basically a drag motor (800 hp-540) and likes the locked out set up at start up and idle. Would running it locked out w/ the vacuum advance functioning for the part throttle advance work the same? I changed it back to centrifigual advance 12 deg. inital and 32 total and made my heat problem worse plus it just didn't seem to like it, harder to start, more cold natured etc. I went back to lock out setup and set it at 36 total and the heat problem got better and the motor was more "snappy" which tells me it may need more during part throtle cruise. I just ordered the same dizzy that I have except it has a vacuum advance and it is possible to set it up that way. Figured I would try the vacuum advance before I go the bigger radiator way - it's cheaper this way too if it works. :D
 
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#31 ·
I'd run the vacuum advance. Even at the drags, your engine spends a lot of time running at less than wide open throttle (returning, staging, tuning, etc).
On the other hand this is done in lower gears with very high rear diff ratios, So manovering locked out dedicated track cars is done at rpms higher than the ave street strip car....generally they have moved to magnitos anyway....
But your point is still raliveint and not incorrect.
 
#33 · (Edited)
Chassis dyno mech locked mine out for runs and I used almost twice as much gas on the way home compared to having vac.adv. working prior to ! I guess I'll have to chg it back for normal driving !
I had a total of 54 deg with it connected so I guess I need to chg the shim to bring total down ?
 
#35 ·
I had a total of 54 deg with it connected so I guess I need to chg the shim to bring total down ?
54 all in ..yep many stock dizzies have such total, and on the surface seems one hell of a lot....then one get down to thinking it thru in the real world.
Generally these cent curves are all in around 4000 /4500 rpms
The VA is working between around 10 and 16"

As the cars speed increases, there is a larger load on the engine to movethe mass at that speed, and over come aerodynamics....which means the 18 or 20" of cruise engine vac at around 40/50 mph starts to drop....rather quickly down to 14" /15"
Which mow meand the VA is dropping out.
Which means the engine doesnt ever get up to or even near the 54 degs.

Which comes back to what I keep on repeating, one need to know exactly what the wengine vaccuun charactorists are with a in car vac gauge.
AND the high adance dizzies tend to be post pionts dizzies, which I keep on saying, are very different to pre HeI mid 70s dizzies....
 
#38 ·
Yup - I wrote it originally as a paper in early 2003, shared it on several different forums, and later dressed it up, expanded it, and published it as a feature article in the November, 2003 issue of "Corvette Enthusiast" magazine, when I was the Technical Editor. Here's a link to the published CE article, offered on our CRG site under "Technical Articles". :)

http://www.camaros.org/pdf/timing101.pdf

:beers:
 
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