My car is a 1980 2 litre Coupe. The distributor is a Bosch unit without vacuum advance. I had ignition issues a couple of years ago and had distributor serviced including replacement of pick-up and original Bosch control unit with small device attached to body of distributor (H&H Ignition) - mid/part throttle flufiness disappeared. However have noticed difficulty getting timing set that ensures smooth tickover whilst decent punch at higher engine speeds. Have just replaced cam belt and timing is "spot on" (i.e. timing marks on crank and cam pulley wheels) - car will tick over perfectly at 800 rpm - haven't put strobe on to check exact level of ignition advance but would guess that this is pretty close to the 10 degrees static nominal. On basis that full advance (from 4K rpm?) is meant to be approx 35 degrees then intuitively would expect to observe at least 25 degrees min mechanical advance available when slowly manually turning distributor rotor cap against spring action to full advance stop. Rough measurement with protractor and a bit of geometry shows a smidge under 20 degrees total movement in the mechanism?
??
Would seem max advance is restricted to 30 degrees or less? Because of this it would seem that only way I can get car to perform strongly at mid/top end is by having static advance of 15 degrees+ with consequent lumpiness and very mild occasional pinging at tickover. Guys who originally did work on distributor and control pack replacement are on holiday this week - I will contact them, but is my train of thought correct?
How easy is it to disassemble the distributor and adjust the maximum advance setting?
Any advice greatly appreciated .........
In mentime off to buy a new timing light