| ||
Visit MustangSteve's web site to view some of my work and find details for: FYIFORD Contributors' PICTURES - Power Brake Retrofit Kits for 65-66 Stangs - Classic Mustang FAQ's by MustangSteve - How to wire in a Duraspark Ignition - Mustang Ride Height Pictures and Descriptions - Steel Bushings to fit Granada Spindles to Mustang Tie Rods - Visit my EBAY store MustangSteve Performance - How to Install Granada Disc Brakes MustangSteve's Disc Brake Swap Page - FYIFORD Acronyms for guide to all the acronyms used on this page - FYIFORD Important information and upcoming events |
1 of 1
Offline
As we all know....vac. advance tuning is a trial & error process because you can't 'set-it' in the driveway!
When it is connected to ported vac it works butt....as soon as you give it some gas the vac. advance drops to zero!
When hooked to mani vacuum the vac. advance is activated all the time.
What about......................(for guys using ported vac advance)......hook up the vac advance to MANI first and with a vac gauge compare the difference between when the vac hose is plugged off.
Make a note of it.......(example 30 degrees)
THEN.......when you attach the hose to the ported side you will KNOW how much vacuum advance you have!
At least this will give you a starting point when trying to tune the vacuum advance.
IF it rattles under acceleration....stop and give the adjustment screw a turn (in the canister)
6sal6
Offline
Ported vacuum increases with engine RPM
Manifold vacuum decreases with engine RPM.
I think the readings will vary with load.
Offline
I think when I put my new 289 (aka 297) motor back in and verifie my full advance I will try both ways just to see if the car runs better or worse. When I did my dauthers 63 nova SS 194 six with a Clifford's intake , holly 2 bl and headers with 40s we ran no advance and the car pulled hard.
Offline
The only difference between ported/manifold advance is when the throttle is closed.
Last edited by RV6 (2/15/2021 10:54 AM)
Offline
RV6 wrote:
The only difference between ported/manifold advance is when the throttle is closed.
Really?
Offline
Bearing Bob wrote:
RV6 wrote:
The only difference between ported/manifold advance is when the throttle is closed.
Really?
Hook two vacuum gauges up, one too ported, one too manifold. Go drive. You'll see the graph above happen in real time.
Offline
RV6 wrote:
Bearing Bob wrote:
RV6 wrote:
The only difference between ported/manifold advance is when the throttle is closed.
Really?
Hook two vacuum gauges up, one too ported, one too manifold. Go drive. You'll see the graph above happen in real time.
That ain't gonna happen. Mine, today, right now, runs best without vacuum advance. Tomorrow... who knows
Offline
So....at start up which is preferred?
At normal idle which is preferred?
And why?
Last edited by Nos681 (2/16/2021 9:23 AM)
Offline
Startup: Ported. This is so you would start with just the initial timing. If at 8 BTDC I don't think it would matter, but some run ridiculous numbers (12+) and the added advance from manifold could make starting difficult.
Idle: Manifold. Lean mixtures take longer to burn and the added advance helps with the burn.
I run manifold with 12 initial. Seems to run good unless the vacuum can messes up. I have never run ported for a comparison and I should. I would imagine just cruising the difference would be negligible as the vacuum is the same between to two ports when the throttle plates are open.
1 of 1
REMEMBER!!! When posting a question about your Mustang or other Ford on this forum, BE SURE to tell us what it is, what year, engine, etc so we have enough information to go on. |