xavier296
New member
I am diligently working on a friend's 66s Mustang 200 auto that she bought in the early 70s but hasn't been driven for 20 years I have it running well, except it heats up at highway speeds (reached 205 after 10 miles on the highway, and it was still going up, despite outside temp being 70 and AC being off).
Short list of mods:
- Sniper 1100
- DUI distributor
- All cooling components new: 3-core brass rad, hoses, waterpump, 180 thermostat
- New head gasket
The distributor gives a lot of vacuum advance: 15 degrees total. My understanding is that adjusting the VA only changes when it engages, not how much, unless I install a limiter. It ran great with 15 btdc initial (30 total) at idle, but I believe the high timing at cruise (50 total) is creating some of my highway speed heatup. I bought all the parts for the HEI to let the sniper control the timing, but haven't found any definitive guidance on creating a timing map. My thoughts:
~20 idle timing under vacuum, 14 low vacuum (probably check my total idle timing with a vacuum gauge)
~35 timing by 2500 rpm at WOT
~45 timing by 2500 rpm at cruise (Is this too much?)
Looking for recommendations to make developing the initial timing map easy.
Short list of mods:
- Sniper 1100
- DUI distributor
- All cooling components new: 3-core brass rad, hoses, waterpump, 180 thermostat
- New head gasket
The distributor gives a lot of vacuum advance: 15 degrees total. My understanding is that adjusting the VA only changes when it engages, not how much, unless I install a limiter. It ran great with 15 btdc initial (30 total) at idle, but I believe the high timing at cruise (50 total) is creating some of my highway speed heatup. I bought all the parts for the HEI to let the sniper control the timing, but haven't found any definitive guidance on creating a timing map. My thoughts:
~20 idle timing under vacuum, 14 low vacuum (probably check my total idle timing with a vacuum gauge)
~35 timing by 2500 rpm at WOT
~45 timing by 2500 rpm at cruise (Is this too much?)
Looking for recommendations to make developing the initial timing map easy.