77 K20
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Nov 9, 2012
- Posts
- 3,121
- Reaction score
- 3,195
- Location
- Montana
- First Name
- Mike
- Truck Year
- 1977
- Truck Model
- K20 5" lift
- Engine Size
- HT383 fuel injected
Just wondering what you guys thought would be best to do in my situation.
I have the GM HT383. It says use a particular GM distributor (HEI distributor P/N 93440806), no vacuum advance and set it to 10* at an idle of 650 RPM. This setting will produce 32º of total advance at wide-open throttle by 4,000 RPM. I've had it like that, and it ran great. I then put on the Edelbrock TBI fuel injection a while back and in their owners manual and talking to one of their tech support guys they keep saying their system runs best with 18-20* initial timing. To me initial timing should be based on what camshaft you have, not what fuel delivery system is has... or am I missing something?
I tried bumping up the timing just to see what it can do- GM says the engine will run on 87 octane. I use 91 octane as it has no ethanol in it up here. The timing tab is almost impossible to see- the power steering bracket is in the way, but I advanced it to around 16-17 degrees and was rewarded with part throttle engine knock. I've turned it down to about 13*. And by advancing the timing now I can not get it to idle less than about 800 RPM (idle screw backed all the way out, and have 650RPM entered into the software). I liked having a nice low idle RPM for when I'm crawling down something steep.
So- leave it there? Or turn it down to 10* and then install one of those adjustable vacuum cans on the distributor so I can run a a little vacuum advance when cruising at least?
I've been reading on this for the last few weeks and haven't come up with much yet. Probably won't mess with it until spring. It is too cold out there in my garage to work on it for long.
I have the GM HT383. It says use a particular GM distributor (HEI distributor P/N 93440806), no vacuum advance and set it to 10* at an idle of 650 RPM. This setting will produce 32º of total advance at wide-open throttle by 4,000 RPM. I've had it like that, and it ran great. I then put on the Edelbrock TBI fuel injection a while back and in their owners manual and talking to one of their tech support guys they keep saying their system runs best with 18-20* initial timing. To me initial timing should be based on what camshaft you have, not what fuel delivery system is has... or am I missing something?
I tried bumping up the timing just to see what it can do- GM says the engine will run on 87 octane. I use 91 octane as it has no ethanol in it up here. The timing tab is almost impossible to see- the power steering bracket is in the way, but I advanced it to around 16-17 degrees and was rewarded with part throttle engine knock. I've turned it down to about 13*. And by advancing the timing now I can not get it to idle less than about 800 RPM (idle screw backed all the way out, and have 650RPM entered into the software). I liked having a nice low idle RPM for when I'm crawling down something steep.
So- leave it there? Or turn it down to 10* and then install one of those adjustable vacuum cans on the distributor so I can run a a little vacuum advance when cruising at least?
I've been reading on this for the last few weeks and haven't come up with much yet. Probably won't mess with it until spring. It is too cold out there in my garage to work on it for long.