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Thread: ok guys... timing question

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    1971 Opel GT maglinjosvinn is on a distinguished road maglinjosvinn's Avatar
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    ok guys... timing question

    got my vac issue solved. car fires right up, advance is clearly working and everything, but i got **** for power.

    i figure its either the tappets, or a timing issue, but i got a car shop right next door that will do the timing for free, he just needs the 'how to' on it, so he has all the right numbers.


    problem is at this point i don't have a resource for getting the timing right! lol. i mean, i know the points are .018, and they already are, the plug wire order is right (drove it here), i can see the dot moving on the flywheel and advancing when you rev, but i don't know the dwell settings, timing mark settings, and the conditions to get them all right.

    so. from the very begining, i'm timing tuning and getting this engine right. what do i do, step by step?
    Last edited by tekenaar; 01-28-2008 at 06:43 PM. Reason: tapits - only in Pakistan
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    Opeler Anonymous D is on a distinguished road
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    Links here

    Complete Tune Up Guide, located under "June 2006" (in 2 Acrobat downloads), is here:

    Engine

  3. #3
    1971 Opel GT maglinjosvinn is on a distinguished road maglinjosvinn's Avatar
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    ok. got my hands on it. but it doesnt' say spit about where to set the advance to at what rpm... or even a blurb on what RPM you should check the timing at even.

    so, if i got the car running at 1100 rpms, how much advance should be on my timing? or if its running at the, what, 3500 rpms? it advances how much? but won't advance further?

    i can't find solid information here or on the web about these questions.
    Pb Blaster is to opelitus what brown paper bags are to alcoholics. neither really cure the ill, just make it easier to pretend its not so bad.

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    Opeler jvandyke is on a distinguished road jvandyke's Avatar
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    From memory, block all vacuum lines to dist. Get idle to about 800/900 loosen dist. hold down bolt, point light at flywheel/ball behind exhaust manifold, twist dizzy until ball is in line with pointer, tighten, recheck. Done. Reattach vacuum lines. Drive (quick while it's warm in Michigan in Jan.!)
    "Being ignorant is not so much a shame, as being unwilling to learn." Benjamin Franklin

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    1971 Opel GT maglinjosvinn is on a distinguished road maglinjosvinn's Avatar
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    whats the vac guage supposed to read and at what RPM?
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    Opeler Anonymous D is on a distinguished road
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    Set it at zero TDC

    Factory specs are to set timing at zero degrees at #1 TDC. This means installing the distributor so that it's in the correct alignment (using the cam sprocket mark and flywheel ball mark as indicators), and using a timing light for more precise adjustments. An engine compression check of each cylinder, can also indicate if the engine is worn (or if a valve is mis-adjusted), which can be relevant as increased vacuum will assist the distributor vacuum advance unit too.

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    1971 Opel GT maglinjosvinn is on a distinguished road maglinjosvinn's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by jvandyke View Post
    From memory, block all vacuum lines to dist. Get idle to about 800/900 loosen dist. hold down bolt, point light at flywheel/ball behind exhaust manifold, twist dizzy until ball is in line with pointer, tighten, recheck. Done. Reattach vacuum lines. Drive (quick while it's warm in Michigan in Jan.!)
    ok, so i reconnect the lines, obviously, the ball is going to move. how much? above or below the pointer?
    Pb Blaster is to opelitus what brown paper bags are to alcoholics. neither really cure the ill, just make it easier to pretend its not so bad.

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    Opeler jvandyke is on a distinguished road jvandyke's Avatar
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    If I understand it correctly, when you reattach the vacuum advance line it will advance the timing a bit during idle only (there's vacuum at idle) as soon as the carb starts to open that vacuum is gone and you're on mechanical advance. Do you suspect vacuum adv./mechanical adv. not functioning correctly? Set initial timing as above and go for a ride, see how she goes. You can watch the ball move as you rev the engine, timing will advance up until about 3500 rpm than that's it (I think). Total mech advance is 32 degrees or so, different per year, I don't know, I'm pulling this out of my head.
    "Being ignorant is not so much a shame, as being unwilling to learn." Benjamin Franklin

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    6,000 Post Club namba209 (R.I.P.) is on a distinguished road namba209 (R.I.P.)'s Avatar
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    O.K. according to my Chilton's or Haynes, I can't tell, the dogs ate the covers, Idle RPM is 850-900 standard tranny, 800-850 auto tranny. Dwell angle is 50 +/- 2 degrees. Total advance is 43-55 degrees @ 2500 RPM. Centrifugal advance starts at 800-1100 RPM, 17-23 degrees @ 1500 RPM and 31-37 degrees @ 3200 RPM. Vacuum advance, starts at 800-1100 RPM and maximum is 31-37 @3200 RPM. It will be impossible to tell where the advance peaks at, because there are no advance indicators on the flywheel. The only way to tell for sure what the advance will be is to mark the flywheel as Jeff Denton has suggested in earlier threads, or put the distributor on a machine, that can check the mechanical advance curve. HTH.
    Ron
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    1971 Opel GT maglinjosvinn is on a distinguished road maglinjosvinn's Avatar
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    .. ok. face value looks good.

    why is there a vac advance at all then? lol. sounds like the mechanical advance takes care of all the BS while ... hell ... almost all times.

    and yeah. car idles like a dream. starts right up. vac lines all nice and sealed and new. sprayed every inch of them with carb cleaner and the gt never missed a beat.

    i just don't have power when i rev it up, she acts like she's missing like crazy, and flat out dies when you down shift to an intersection. i'm getting tired of starting it so much (i've actually broken the keyway in the column about a week ago cause of the constant restarts.)
    Pb Blaster is to opelitus what brown paper bags are to alcoholics. neither really cure the ill, just make it easier to pretend its not so bad.

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    Opeler jvandyke is on a distinguished road jvandyke's Avatar
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    Where was the vacuum leak?
    I think vacuum advance is there for a bit cleaner burning at idle.
    "Being ignorant is not so much a shame, as being unwilling to learn." Benjamin Franklin

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    6,000 Post Club namba209 (R.I.P.) is on a distinguished road namba209 (R.I.P.)'s Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by maglinjosvinn View Post
    .. ok. face value looks good. why is there a vac advance at all then? lol. sounds like the mechanical advance takes care of all the BS while ... hell ... almost all times.
    Vacuum "advance" is a misnomer. It should actually be called vacuum retard. The purpose of the vacuum can is to retard the ignition timing as the vacuum is lost during open throttle applications to inhibit pinging caused by the mechanical and vacuum advance being too far advanced, such as going up a hill and as you slow down you give the car more gas. Without the vacuum retard the engine will ping if the ignition is too far advanced. Part of the "old school" timing procedure is to take the car up a hill, step on the gas an see if it will ping. If it does, retard the timing, repeat until it doesn't ping, or just starts to.
    Last edited by tekenaar; 01-28-2008 at 07:22 PM.
    Ron
    72 GT 3.4L V-6/T-5/ZF posi - almost done - Just need AC installed.
    75 Chevy monza 5.7L/TH350/Auburn 3.08 posi - Next

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    Opeler Anonymous D is on a distinguished road
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    Timing by ear

    If you don't want to do all the work to correctly verify that your timing set up is correct, then you can time it by ear (with the vacuum lines still attached). Idle the engine, then rotate the distributor (turn the vacuum unit away from the engine (CW)) to retard it. Do this so far that the engine starts to slow down, then rotate it back in the opposite direction just a nudge. This retard at idle setting, provides more power at higher rpm's on the road (presuming all other components, such as carb, valves, cam timing, etc., are adjusted correctly)
    Last edited by tekenaar; 01-28-2008 at 06:46 PM.

  14. #14
    1971 Opel GT maglinjosvinn is on a distinguished road maglinjosvinn's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by jvandyke View Post
    Where was the vacuum leak?
    I think vacuum advance is there for a bit cleaner burning at idle.
    valve cover to manifold.
    Pb Blaster is to opelitus what brown paper bags are to alcoholics. neither really cure the ill, just make it easier to pretend its not so bad.

  15. #15
    1971 Opel GT maglinjosvinn is on a distinguished road maglinjosvinn's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Anonymous D View Post
    If you don't want to do all the work to correctly verify that your timing set up is correct, then you can time it by ear (with the vacuum lines still attached). Idle the engine, then rotate the distributor (turn the vacuum unit away from the engine) to retard it. Do this so far that the engine starts to slow down, then rotate it back in the opposite direction just a nudge. This retard at idle setting, provides more power at higher rpm's on the road (presuming all other components, such as carb, valves, cam timing, etc., are adjusted correctly)

    ok in quick review:

    get car to idle at 800 - 900 rpms

    remove vac lines from distributor.

    plug vac lines

    rotate dist until dot is at tip of needle

    connect lines



    to better power at higher speeds/rpms, retard the timing back a bit. would the same be in reverse for power at lower speeds? i mean city driving vs highway driving?
    Pb Blaster is to opelitus what brown paper bags are to alcoholics. neither really cure the ill, just make it easier to pretend its not so bad.

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    1971 Opel GT maglinjosvinn is on a distinguished road maglinjosvinn's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by namba209 View Post
    Vacuum "advance" is a misnomer. It should actually be called vacuum retard. The purpose of the vacuum can is to retard the ignition timing as the vacuum is lost during open throttle applications to inhibit pinging caused by the mechanical and vacuum advance being to far advanced, such as going up a hill and as you slow down you give the car more gas. Without the vacuum retard the engine will ping if the ignition is too far advanced. Part of the "old school" timing procedure is to take the car up a hill, step on the gas an see if it will ping. If it does, retard the timing, repeat until it doesn't ping, or just starts to.

    ping?
    Pb Blaster is to opelitus what brown paper bags are to alcoholics. neither really cure the ill, just make it easier to pretend its not so bad.

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    tomking tomking is on a distinguished road tomking's Avatar
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    Valve cover to manifold????????????????????
    Ping.
    TMK

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    Opeler Anonymous D is on a distinguished road
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    Advance

    Advanced timing increases idle speed. That's why uninformed persons adjust their timing to where it "sounds best", but then lose high RPM power on the road.

    Presuming all other settings are correct (again: you should verify cam sprocket mark, correct distributor installation for #1TDC, correct valve adjustments, and secure vacuum circuits, before doing final timing), retarding the distributor (just a notch above where the retard affects idle stability) will gain you smoother street operation and more power at higher rpm's.

  19. #19
    1971 Opel GT maglinjosvinn is on a distinguished road maglinjosvinn's Avatar
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    yeah, the valve cover has a small hole that is supposed to be connected via a hose to the lower nipple on the mainifold, just under the power booster and retard side of the dizzy nipple.

    whats a ping. not ping. the guy said the engine will ping. haven't got a clue what that means.
    Pb Blaster is to opelitus what brown paper bags are to alcoholics. neither really cure the ill, just make it easier to pretend its not so bad.

  20. #20
    1971 Opel GT maglinjosvinn is on a distinguished road maglinjosvinn's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Anonymous D View Post
    Advanced timing increases idle speed. That's why uninformed persons adjust their timing to where it "sounds best", but then lose high RPM power on the road.

    Presuming all other settings are correct (again: you should verify cam sprocket mark, correct distributor installation for #1TDC, correct valve adjustments, and secure vacuum circuits, before doing final timing), retarding the distributor (just a notch above where the retard affects idle stability) will gain you smoother street operation and more power at higher rpm's.

    ok.

    here's a tidbit:

    when you stand on the drivers side of the car, and look into the engine compartment, you can see the dizzy then the engine block


    rightnow my wires are at:

    2 --- 1
    | |
    | |
    4 --- 3


    but now that i'm looking at the pdf a bit closer, i see that i'm apparnetly rotated so that my plugs are all off by one quarter turn of the dist,.... 1 should be where 3 is, 3 where 4 is... so forth and so on... but i can also say that when you hook that timing light up to the 1 plug and shoot the window at the flywheel that mark is usually dead on... at least lower rpms


    so i guess my question is wether or not i got this right. lol. i mean. ... how would it even run?


    next question... imagine i can check the cam position w/ #4 tdc without taking the engine out? i know that this car has run absolutely beautifully in the past and i can assure you no one's played with any of the component positioning. lol.
    Pb Blaster is to opelitus what brown paper bags are to alcoholics. neither really cure the ill, just make it easier to pretend its not so bad.

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