Went to cruise night last night (first time post-Pertronix install) and tried giving the car a little more timing (2 degrees), to about 37 degrees at 3000RPM. It responded well and pulls stronger across the range. My idle was still over 1000RPM. I added even more timing (another 2 degrees), idle went down, but idle was rough and the engine was shaking a bit (too lean I reckon). I added a couple clicks to the FI pump, idle was smooth and a touch under 1000 RPM with the performance unaffected. It is still too high. The air adjustment screw is all the way in, so I cannot physically give less air to the mix. I will try giving a couple more clicks to the pump.
I wonder if I am taking the problem from the wrong end, but the only way I see I can get my idle go down is by giving more timing. My air screw being all the way in (cannot give less air), I will give more fuel (2 clicks), check idle, and add a bit of timing to the distributor to take the idle RPM down...take the car for a drive, check for pinging...nothing audible, pulls really well...what can be wrong? I am using 94 octane (AKI) fuel exclusively.
The car currently has W6DC plugs that show the appropriate light brown color, gapped at 29 thousandths. Tonight I will try my new BP5ES and I will gap them at 35 thousandths, see what happens.
Please tell me to stop if I am doing stuff that can cause damage. The way I see it, I am just having fun learning how my car works, and hopefully fix that "too fast" idle the garage people could not fix (they only used the air adjustment...and once it was all the way in, the idle could not possibly go lower)...so I see my options as:
1-more fuel
2-more timing
3-check linkage again, just in case
have a great day!
Jerome