The other day I was adjusting the ignition timing on my 1980 XS1100 from 5 degrees BTDC to 10 degrees BTDC, as I no longer have the vacuum advance hooked up. I was kind of shocked at the lazy way the centrifugal advance worked. Very little advance prior to 3000 rpm, and not full in until almost 5000 rpm. This is definitely not a performance advance curve. When I used to play with fast cars, we had all the advance in by 2800 rpm, 3000 rpm at the latest. Has anyone played with a more performance oriented advance curve on these bikes? I'm thinking that we are losing a lot of torque in the 3 to 5000 rpm range. Perhaps this is also the cause of the power dip and rich mixture indication we see at this rpm range on all the dyno charts posted on this site? Anybody have thoughts on this?
Leo
Leo
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