hi, i gotta a 49 with 216, i just fitted petronix elec ign, whats best plug gap? and what shall i reset timing to? she seems a bit sluggish now,
vacuum working, original plug gap 35in, been told coz its now elec it gotta be 50, and that i have to redo timing, poss to 10 to 18 ??? just want to besure
I'm no automotive engineer but I'll give it a try - The electronic ignition gives you a hotter spark, that enables you to set a wider plug gap; the wider gap enables you to use that hotter spark. Ignition timing, as I understand it, is more dependent on compression ratio, combustion chamber design, camshaft, gasoline quality and intake charge temperature - and none of this has changed so stock timing should work. As for the vacuum advance, those old Chevy's used a ported vacuum, when you 'crack' the throttle open you get a vacuum signal which advances the timing. And you are setting the timing using a timing light on the flywheel ball and the pointer in the opening of the bellhousing right above the starter? Now - if anybody disagrees with what I said, you will soon get a bunch of comments...............
With an adjustable light set it to '0'; time #1 to the 'ball' The clamp for the vacuum advance has a scale on it, set that to '0' There should be no vacuum at idle, and set the idle as low as you can. I just thought of something else, if I remember right, the centrifugal advance on those 216's comes on very quickly - do you know the advance curve in the distributor? If the advance is not coming in quick enough that might explain why it seems a little sluggish.
In the original 1938 Chevy operators manual it says to adjust the timing so that a slight " Ping " can be heard.
I use a vacuum gauge to set the timing on my 235. Pull all the vacuum you can, then back off a little. The "slight ping" method is good too, if you can hear. The needle and ball thing wasn't very accurate for my car. 235s and I assume 216s like what they like, and you got to find what it likes by tinkering with it. And I don't know if the Pertronix necessarily means a hotter spark, (you need a hotter coil, right?) just a more accurate one.
I go with the "ping" method. These 6's will run best when the timing is set just under the ping point. The initial advance on my 235 is WA-Y-Y ahead of what the book calls for and it runs great.
well ive had a pertronix ign in a 235 six for 20 years .plug gaps are 0.45 thou and set the timing by ear runs like a bat out of hell!lol
Electronic ignition works fine with stock ignition timing. You don't need an adjustable light to set your timing. A regular light will work just fine. As for plug gap I run pretty hot spark on most of my stuff and seldom gap my plugs more then .045. A good place to get a definitive answer would be from GMCBubba. he builds petronix dizzys for a living.