Hello,
A little while back I bought a 1970 280 sel, which I am using as a daily driver mainly back and forth to the office. (It should be similar to a late 280sl). The car runs nice but had the idle speed set to high. In an attempt to address the problem, I first went through the linkage adjustment procedure to insure everything is good there. After that, I looked into the ignition timing. (The car has transistorized ignition, blue coil with a 066 distributor).
I recognized that the two-way valve had one vacuum line going to the distributor but no line coming from the manifold. The manifold nipple had a plug. In other words, no vacuum was going to the distributor.
I red through the threads in the forum and found:
https://www.sl113.org/forums/index.php?topic=10806.0Following the advice, I first checked that I have 12V at the valve at idle.
I don’t. (the valve itself if I apply 12V, switches fine. Measuring 16-17inHG)
I than bypassed the valve and ran vacuum direct from the manifold to the distributor. (Timing at 8 ATDC with vacuum). The car starts and runs well but I have excessive “pinging” under load at low rpm’s.
I reverted back to my original no vacuum setting with the timing set at approx. 0-2 deg BTDC (750 rpm) and close to 20 deg BTDC @ 3000 rpm. The car runs relatively good in that set up. However, I am probably losing power and efficiency at higher speed.?
To the experts: how exactly does the valve / vacuum relative to the distributor work?
What would be the best fix? (I am not too excited about the whole emission system with all its problems as it ages).
My distributor, also not bad, has a little play between the shaft and the bushing. I was looking into a 123 system. Am I correct in assuming the 123 would take vacuum direct from the manifold to operate?
Any opinions and help would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you
Dirk