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- My Car
- 1973 Mustang Sportsroof. Currently a work in progress!!!
Going from a 2bbl to a 4 bbl cab and I need to know if the distributor needs ported vacuum?
Tim
Tim
MY swap from oem 2V to 4V involved the factory intake replaced with an Edelbrock intake, both of which use a vac connection tapped in the forward area of the intake. That was how Ford designed it and always worked just fine with my new Holley and factory dist.
Right on Mike!I also use ported vacuum, to me it makes for a more predictable steady idle especially with an automatic transmission when going from park to drive.
ported for our cars is how it came from the factory, you can retune for Full manifold vacuum if wanted.
Ported vacuum means, ZERO vacuum to the vacuum advance at idle RPMs.
full manifold vacuum means what ever the idle Vacuum is will be acting on the vacuum advance.
what this means is:
with ported vacuum the vacuum advance is Turned off at Idle rpms. this lowers timing at idle which increase exhaust temperature, this reduces emmisions at idle(when sitting in traffic)
this means when you stomp on the pedal first Vacuum turns on and advances the vacuum advance however under heavy acceleration vacuum will be low and thus the advance will basically shutdown again until vacuum picks up at cruise speed.
with full manifold vacuum the vacuum advance is on and engine timing is advanced, when you stomp on it the engine will be at a higher timing already resulting in more off the line power then the vac drops and the advance drops and again vaccum will catch up at cruise speed.
this is why people like full manifold vacuum because you get more off the line power at the cost of higher emissions.
the big thing to watch out for in going from ported to full on the advance is ping/detonation you have to see what your engine will tolerate and take initial timing out or recurve the distributor at different points. it is more trial and error with each engine individually. basically the performance guys want to take the engine right to the edge of lean on the entire throttle to make more power, the guys that drive in traffic want good all around performance.
having the exhaust at a higher temperature not only reduces emissions but can benefit daily driving where the environment is not always 75F ,sunny, with low humidity.
it is a trade off.
if your car must pass emissions inspection then this can be a problem converting over to full manifold vacuum.
I think you're right, there are many variations of vacuum hose combinations depending on the year, options, emissions, etc. etc. Just finding the correct one can be the issue, then sorting out what you really need. If I'm right, the basic requirements are the same, but it's all the option stuff that gets in the way. Not many of us run 351C's 2V or 4V as they were shipped from the factory, so my thinking is that it comes down to researching what we need and don't need, then customizing the hoses to suit.I believe I have seen at least 4 different vac hose diagrams for 72 351c's depending upon if it is 2v, 4v, auto, manual, ac/non-ac ....and of course if it was a california car. I also dont know if the autolite 2100 on my car even had a dist advance port. I do know that my engine had open chambers and the factory specs for tuning resulted in a car that ran so badly and was so underpowered that the initial advance had to be so low so that it wouldn't ping sitting being driven off the lot, had less than 200hp, and even had to have a throttle position solenoid installed just so you could turn the car off without it running on forever. So while yer 4v CJ may have had hoses going one way, mine was different.
Exactly. Originally the 72 351c (in my 73) had the EGR in place and working, but the solenoid for A/C pause during idle wasn't connected. Diagrams show that solenoid in two different places, upfront on the drivers side of the block or in the rear on the right side of block. Of course there's different routing for each location.I think you're right, there are many variations of vacuum hose combinations depending on the year, options, emissions, etc. etc. Just finding the correct one can be the issue, then sorting out what you really need. If I'm right, the basic requirements are the same, but it's all the option stuff that gets in the way. Not many of us run 351C's 2V or 4V as they were shipped from the factory, so my thinking is that it comes down to researching what we need and don't need, then customizing the hoses to suit.
Yes, no , maybe??
It is because when you hook the vacuum advance up to a vacuum source below the throttle blades it sees vacuum as soon as the engine is running.Since we are on the subject, does anyone know why my dist does that? Instantly going to 40° when att full vacuum.
When i hook it up to my ported slot i think i have it set up about 16 initial and 36 total. And i can adjust the total timing at the vacuum canister.
But at full manifols vacuum its just 40 initial and won't move at all when adjusting.:huh:
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