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11-30-2021, 08:12 PM | #1 |
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1955 F-100 5.0L timing
What is the best method for timing my 5.0L 4v carburetor V8. Do I use the vacuum above or below the throttle plates?
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11-30-2021, 08:37 PM | #2 |
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Re: 1955 F-100 5.0L timing
What year and donor vehicle is the engine from, also the make and model of the carburetor and ignition system?
Intake manifold vacuum can be used to adjust the initial timing, with the line to the vacuum canister on the distributor disconnected and plugged while setting the initial timing. The line for the distributor vacuum canister from the carburetor is 'ported' vacuum, above the throttle plates. . Last edited by dmsfrr; 12-06-2021 at 03:51 PM. |
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11-30-2021, 10:07 PM | #3 |
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Re: 1955 F-100 5.0L timing
For timing, use manifold vacuum, under the throttle plate. Advance the timing to the maximum steady vacuum, then back off just a bit, maybe 1/2 inch of vacuum. Tighten down the dizzy and test drive it. During the test, lug the engine just a bit and listen for ping. If no ping, you are finished. If it pings, back it off just a bit more.
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12-01-2021, 09:34 PM | #4 |
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Re: 1955 F-100 5.0L timing
84 FMC short block 5.0L. Edelbrock dual plane 4bbl aluminum performer intake with Edelbrock 4bbl carb. New standard ford dizzy.
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12-01-2021, 11:27 PM | #5 |
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Re: 1955 F-100 5.0L timing
By trying to set the timing by vacuum, at idle, you are not compensating for the mechanical advance. Use a timing light, ideally 36 to 38 degrees total (vac & mech) advance is where you need to be. Not to be picky, but Fords work best with venturi vacuum (above the throttle plates)
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12-02-2021, 09:53 AM | #6 |
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Re: 1955 F-100 5.0L timing
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- POSSIBLE START of NEW FOOD FIGHT - What is being discussed is BASIC INITIAL TIMING, finding optimum initial timing set through use of the manifold vacuum reading (same as carb idle/balance adjustment). You are describing POWER TIMING in a sense. But the reference to use of ported vacuum for the vacuum advance is correct (IMO). Of course one would verify timing with a light after using this method to insure there is not too much advance. |
12-02-2021, 10:05 AM | #7 | |
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Re: 1955 F-100 5.0L timing
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12-02-2021, 10:36 AM | #8 |
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Re: 1955 F-100 5.0L timing
No, "total timing" is always determined without vacuum advance. Most OHV V8 want 34° to 36°, somewhere in there anyway. On flat ground, cruising out on the highway 50° or even more is typical.
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12-02-2021, 11:18 AM | #9 |
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Re: 1955 F-100 5.0L timing
Take a look at factory specs on any Ford, GM or Mopar from the 60's. The mechanical system was good for 12-16 degrees, add that to the base timing from 2-12 degrees and you had from 14 to 28 degrees total mechanical advance. Many early vac advance cans from Ford were adjustable either with washers/spacers or an allen wrench. Ideally 38 degrees grand total will be cleaner, outperform and get better mileage than the missfire that is created with 50 degrees. Put the vehicle on a chassis dyno and watch the hydrocarbon level climb at 50 degrees
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12-02-2021, 11:59 AM | #10 | ||
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1955 F-100 timing
Quote:
"Total timing" is an old drag racing term, they don't even have a vacuum advance installed on the distributor. That's kind of how the term got started most likely. And they will often lock out the distributor completely to 34° or 36°. Quote:
The stock factory manual specs for '64 shows a "total" total of mechanical + vacuum possible advance of roughly 48° BTDC under steady cruise condition. It does require a sharp tune with a good hot ignition spark to reliably ignite lean fuel mixtures. But that's the story why so much ignition advance is necessary under those conditions (that's why vacuum advance was invented in the first place) there was simply no way to achieve the necessary ignition advance curve using centrifugal weights and springs alone. |
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12-02-2021, 12:00 PM | #11 |
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Re: 1955 F-100 5.0L timing
... can I start shiat or what ... INITIAL ADVANCE and MECHANICAL ADVANCE are the only factors in TOTAL TIMING ADVANCE. The manifold vacuum signal is not constant and drops out of the equation at higher RPM's. VACUUM ADVANCE is for drive-ability on a street engine, not meant for a race engine (either using a mechanical distributor). |
12-02-2021, 12:03 PM | #12 | |
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Re: 1955 F-100 5.0L timing
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12-02-2021, 12:15 PM | #13 |
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Re: 1955 F-100 5.0L timing
I'd be wondering the same as KULTULZ on the distributor. Standard for 1984 electronic distributor or standard Ford small block distributor for 1964 thru? If it is for a 55 F-100 then it's likely not long on electronic accessories. A distributor can be set up by trial and error with a timing light that has degree adjustments or it can be set up on a distributor machine. The other thing we would have to assume is if it has a 1405 or a 1406 Edelbrock 600 CFM copy of the Carter AFB.
I'm not sure how a 1984 5.0 compares to a 1969 302 either as far as combustion chamber size and compression ratio. |
12-02-2021, 12:24 PM | #14 | |
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Re: 1955 F-100 5.0L timing
Quote:
You are getting brave making a statement like that. As most know, KULTULZ wonders about a host of things, one being which time warp he is located in ... |
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12-02-2021, 06:03 PM | #15 |
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Re: 1955 F-100 5.0L timing
I've had trouble in the past with some cars using manifold vacuum. Get everything set at idle and then you put in drive, rpm drops and then vacuum drops that pulls the advance down and that drops rpm further. I just seem to have better luck using the ported vacuum. All my carbed Fords came that way from the 60's to the 80's. Just my experience. Try it both ways and see which suits your engine better.
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12-02-2021, 06:23 PM | #16 |
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Re: 1955 F-100 5.0L timing
It depends on the system but anything can be made to work in some way that would likely be acceptable. The old Load-O-Matics had venturi vacuum but there was no mechanical advance at all. I've seen where folks use a modified Chevy distributor with an adjustable port in the vacuum can and they set it up to use manifold pressure to operate a load control mated with the existing mechanical advance and they work pretty well. Flatheads don't need much advance. The small block Ford will likely need at least what it was set up for in 1984. If heads and cam are changed then all that may require further changes but it likely wouldn't be all that much change. On a different carb a person needs to check and see what pressure the port is supposed to give and compare that to a stock type Ford carb to see if it's compatible. They have several ports on the Edelbrock AFB carbs. A person can use them or plug them but there should be information about that in the carburetor specification sheet.
Last edited by rotorwrench; 12-05-2021 at 10:08 AM. |
12-05-2021, 12:18 AM | #17 |
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Re: 1955 F-100 5.0L timing
I suppose, if people only drove at wide open full throttle you might have a point!
But again, there is no point to vacuum advance in drag racing in the first place, because there is basically only one engine operating condition and that's flat out wide open throttle. But we're not talking about that type of operation in ordinary passenger or street driven cars. An engine designed to be driven on the street, puttering around town at part load throttle and varying speeds, RPM and steady cruise at highway speeds etc., requires an ignition distributor capable of controlling the ignition to meet very diverse operating conditions. A simple centrifugal weight & spring mechanism alone could not achieve those requirements because the necessary timing advance "spread" or range for optimum fuel combustion characteristics was way too wide. A typical OHV V8 from an engineering standpoint needs about 50° BTDC advance or more when cruising down the highway on flat ground in high gear. Drag racing engines simply don't "do" part throttle cruising, so it's irrelevant. If the distributor springs were light or flexible enough in a passenger car to allow for that much ignition advance at highway cruise, if the reluctor slots were long enough for that, then the engines would have been grenading left and right simply by driving normally around town. To get around this problem they ingeniously utilized engine manifold vacuum as an engine load-based signal to supplement centrifugal advance and met ignition advance requirements that way. It is possible to use the engine itself as a kind of "distributor machine" for tuning purposes, but the only point I was making earlier was that the specification listed in the shop manual, the nominal numbers themselves listed, are exactly half of what actually appear at the crankshaft. This was because of the assumption by Ford that a distributor was being set up and tested on a distributor machine, not by Joe in his garage with a timing light. |
12-05-2021, 02:32 AM | #18 | |
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Re: 1955 F-100 5.0L timing
How in the world did a very simple question (arriving at peak timing using manifold vacuum) turn into a total ignition theory discussion? You can operate a fully mechanical distributor on the street. FORD offered it for years. The only true benefit of vacuum advance is fuel economy, street-ability and emission requirements. How the advance curve is set up is how street-able the car will be. A SATURDAY NIGHT SPECIAL, not that big of a deal. Here is the correct answer to the OP's question - Quote:
... sheesh ...
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12-06-2021, 10:12 AM | #19 | ||
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5.0L timing
Quote:
Quote:
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01-15-2022, 09:55 PM | #20 |
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Re: 1955 F-100 5.0L timing
Picture of tag from crate
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01-15-2022, 09:56 PM | #21 |
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Re: 1955 F-100 5.0L timing
I am also ol' Geezer
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01-16-2022, 03:22 AM | #22 | |||
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Re: 5.0L timing
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You are the one that brought cam and crank timing into the discussion adding additional disinformation. It has nothing to do with the question asked. The best way to time a mechanically sound engine is with a timing light. The best way to set timing on an mechanically unknown condition engine (or performance) is with manifold vacuum. Too many mechanical variables to depend on a light. Quote:
If that is what you consider stinkin' up the forums at least enter (IMO).
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