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my advance at idle (vacuum disconnected, of course), even at "below idle" (~450 RPM), "jumps around" by ±3°. SO, it looks to me like my centrifugal advance springs are shot
I think they probably are not. Not with that low mileage on your car; not unless someone's brutalized the distributor or something's come apart.
Fair assessment. I was surprised by how good the distributor looked inside. Thats reassuring.
It still does not explain the "faster" advance curve, though.
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reaches full advance too early, so is in full advance at lower RPMs than it should be
All the more reason to back off your initial timing.
Which I did, and I didn't have any pinging on a few-mile, multi-hill drive tonight.
BUT, now that I retarded it a bit (and readjusted the idle speed and mixture), it's sometimes a bit balky on accelerating from low RPMs, like it bogs and stalls, or nearly so, even after increasing the idle speed to about 625.
I feel it needs a more leisurely centrifugal advance.
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I'm sure they make adjustable hot rod vacuum advance pots
Your present new pot might be adjustable, at that. Not too big a range of hex keys that will fit thru the vacuum nipple; try them out—inch and metric—and see if any of them will grab hold. If so, tighten.
Worth a try, though, after several hours of cogitation, I think the vacuum advance is close enough to specs for practical purposes (I initially got riled up over it because of a failure to perform some basic arithmetic).
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Dawson's and Arizona Parts list the correct MoPar units (2098209) for not-unreasonable prices. Of course, there are those who would recommend against half-century old rubber parts, even if they are "new." Opinions?
A lot depends on how and where they were stored. A high-ozone location will wreck rubber, but without that something like the diaphragm in a vacuum pot can be just fine even after sitting on a shelf for decades.
Thank you. That was exactly the sort of advice I was looking for.
As above, I'm relegating changes to the vacuum advance to the back burner, but I'll keep that in mind, and will probably buy a factory original unit, if only for purposes of originality (which is spelled "O-C-D").
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As far as the springs, which seem to be the important part, nobody has them, and nothing lists them (MoPar # 2448260).
I'll be surprised if your springs are broken. Also, there will be
two part numbers for the two
different springs.
I'm sure they're not broken. I'm just concerned they may have gotten weak. The timing curve I measured would certainly imply it.
But Chrysler does only list one single part number for them, as a set. They are not listed individually.
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I did completely disassemble, clean, and lubricate the distributor a few months ago, and it was clean and looked like new inside, so this isn't a "rust" or "dried-up grease" problem.
If you didn't have any broken springs then, you probably don't now. That doesn't mean everything's ducky with the springs; you may have swapped the light/heavy springs such that they're no longer adjusted the way they started out. Andor, they might have never been correctly adjusted in the first place.
I never removed the springs from their posts, so if they've been swapped, it wusn't me that dun it.
I'm just concerned that they're weak. I've seen it with other vehicles (motorcycles), so I know it can happen.
Thanks as always, Dan. I'll keep you apprised as I work this out. And I will work it out.
– Eric