Cees and all,
I think you should not rely on what the vacuum gauge calls "normal" for tuning, you should rely on factory specs. I've never seen a factory spec for normal vacuum at idle, but normal vacuum is a function of engine design specs, such as valve timing, overlap, and ignition timing. These engines run relatively retarded timing at idle compared to a lot of other engines (for reasons we haven't puzzled out yet), and retarded timing at idle gives lower vacuum. But retarded timing is what the MB engineers came up with and I think we should trust them.
My car reads about 14 to 15 inches of vacuum at idle. From the dial on my gauge this is low, but the car runs great, idles great, has good scampitude. Use the gauge as a tool, not as a guide to how it should be tuned.
The vacuum gauge is useful for those of us who do not have CO meters, as it provides an alternate method of adjusting the idle air/fuel ratio. The CO meter is the better method, though.
Last, running too much ignition advance is very dangerous. It may idle wonderfully, but there is potential for detonation under high speed/high load conditions. Detonation can turn an engine into junk in a few minutes. No more driving until you've put it back right, Cees!
George Davis
'69 280 SL Euro manual