Mustang_Geezer":1ic92psd said:
Just curious....
What causes low vacuum readings?
My engine has always pulled only 8-10 inches of vacuum ever since I installed my new cam 3 years ago.
I degreed it and installed it straight up.
Nothing is physically wrong with the engine and I'm not going to be tearing into it to fix this.
Just wondering why? Isnt 16-18 inches of vacuum normal on a small six?
Thanks,
Doug
Addo is on to it. To fix it idle Hg, you have to do a cold cranking compression tests on all six cylinders, and then adjust the advance or retard untill you get it to 180 to 185 psi. Cold is something of a misnomer. Run it, drop the plugs, and test it (make sure your plugs are still connected to your electronic ignition or you'll mangle your MSD!)
With that sorted, you can then forget about degreeing the cam. Hot Rod ran an article on it a while back, 2003 on something. The internal combustion engine is limited by detonation, and if you get the CCC right, you can lean on it hard and still have it work ok on the street. If you have to retard it too much, you have a cam too radical to get good idle Hg.
Most cams work best hooked up straight up. When the engine is being run in, you then tend to tune the engine by retarding the cam, and then redo fuel mixtures and run it another 2500 miles, and then find that the cam runs wrong...and that heads up was the right on at the begining!. The rings and rope seal are all bedding in, and even the lifter bleed down or clearances change. Everything is related. I'd just do the cold cranking compression, and do it each couple of months. I'd say vacuum will go up over timne, as Fords take a long time to settle in, especailly with a high lift cam.
My mate had a CC280 on his 71 Ford Falcon 351c 2V with 4-bbl intake, and he still got 22 mpg on the highway with less than 12 "Hg vaccum. Around town, it dropped to 16, which he was still happy with.