Hey Greg,
Just wanted to post a followup to this. Yesterday I needed to go back to my job location for a little repair on a piece of diagnostic equipment we use, and so I decided to take my bike instead of the cage. I grabbed a large file binder clip and folded and clamped my vac. adv. hose, left it connected to the carb but it was clamped shut! IT started just fine, and I then rode it the 25 miles to my work location, both city and highway. Revved perfectly fine all the way to redline, and had plenty of roll on power in 5th from 60mph to 80+ when I wanted to pass a herd of cages to get into clear traffic!
So this helps prove that the vac. adv. isn't ESSENTIAL for power and acceleration performance. I didn't ride it this way for a whole tank full of gas so I can't report how it would detrimentally affect the mileage, but my right wrist affects it enough anyways
. The Vac. Adv. is nice to have but if I were putting on newer GSXR type carbs without a vac. port, I wouldn't be worried about it.
T.C.
Just wanted to post a followup to this. Yesterday I needed to go back to my job location for a little repair on a piece of diagnostic equipment we use, and so I decided to take my bike instead of the cage. I grabbed a large file binder clip and folded and clamped my vac. adv. hose, left it connected to the carb but it was clamped shut! IT started just fine, and I then rode it the 25 miles to my work location, both city and highway. Revved perfectly fine all the way to redline, and had plenty of roll on power in 5th from 60mph to 80+ when I wanted to pass a herd of cages to get into clear traffic!
So this helps prove that the vac. adv. isn't ESSENTIAL for power and acceleration performance. I didn't ride it this way for a whole tank full of gas so I can't report how it would detrimentally affect the mileage, but my right wrist affects it enough anyways
. The Vac. Adv. is nice to have but if I were putting on newer GSXR type carbs without a vac. port, I wouldn't be worried about it. T.C.

.
I remember doing the tuneup on my old 69 pontiac with a 350 V8 with points ignition. I would use an allen wrench and a dwell meter to set the gap. Then I would DISCONNECT the vac. adv. and set the timing with the timing light. Then I would CONNECT the vac. adv. and the timing would immediately increase some 5-10 degrees IIRC, and while in neutral I would rev the engine while monitoring it with the timing light, and it would advance more which was the cent. adv. engaging. But I do remember the timing advancing at idle once the vac. adv. hose was connected to the distributor. So...that's different in action a bit from our bikes. The vac. port on the intake manifold of the V-8 seemed to be just direct manifold vacuum, not ported/restricted aside from just the size of the hose nipple!?

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