TucsonHooligan":2zteff0l said:
Have a manual, I swear. Just not familiar with all this. I hooked up the timing light, set my timing at 10 degrees before TDC. The second I hooked the vacuum line, it advanced 14 degrees. I brought the idle down and tried to find a happy medium, but then when I put it into gear, it stalled out from the low idle. So i set the idle with it in gear, but it still seems to advance to full as soon as I hook the vacuum line up. Any ideas?
It's supposed to advance the timing with the vacuum advance hooked up, although 14 more degrees seems a bit much offhand. Here are the advance specs from my '62 manual, shouldn't be too different from yours;
NOTE: this is all on a test stand at different
distributor (half engine) rpm and vacuum levels, and I'm not sure why the different rpms, since there's no centrifugal advance, but ok...
144 and 170 engines w/ automatic transmission
650 RPM and .35 inches mercury = 0 degrees advance
900 RPM and .76 inches mercury = .75-1.75 degrees advance
1250 RPM and 1.4 inches mercury = 4-5 degrees advance
2000 RPM and 3.0 inches mercury = 8.5-9.75 degrees advance
Max advance limit = 11.75 degrees at 10 inches mercury
That's not a lot of vacuum being applied, but then these are test specs and not what the dizzy sees in operation. You could test these numbers by applying the vacuum levels and revving the engine to 2X the indicated rpm, just to see if you're in the ballpark.
Rarely do the dizzy springs 'wear out' more often the insides of the dizzy get gummed up and start sticking, or the baseplate wears and then you get all sorts of wierd points-gap and advance stuff happening. I'd pull the dizzy, take it apart according to your manual, and give it a good cleaning / lube by the book.