Vac. advance on electronic ignition
- ga.spyder
- Posts: 3478
- Joined: Tue Nov 06, 2007 7:19 pm
- Your car is a: 1982 Spider 2000
- Location: Blairsville ,Ga.
Vac. advance on electronic ignition
I have noticed a slight stutter or dead spot at above 5000 rpm.Slight but noticeable.Looking under hood Ive discovered my vac. advance doesnt seem to be working. It isnt moving the arm under throttle ,and you can suck on hose and draw air.Would this cause the problem w/ the high rpm lag? I have ordered a new one. Craig
- ga.spyder
- Posts: 3478
- Joined: Tue Nov 06, 2007 7:19 pm
- Your car is a: 1982 Spider 2000
- Location: Blairsville ,Ga.
I'd make sure to check not only the initial timing but both the mechanical and vacuum advance totals once you get the dist sorted out. Then check the fuel mixture and make sure the AFM flap works thru its' range without sticking. On the FI units, adjusting the air/fuel mixture will affect it throughout the entire rpm range
- bradartigue
- Posts: 2183
- Joined: Thu Sep 20, 2007 2:35 pm
- Your car is a: 1970 Sport Spider
- Location: Atlanta, GA
The vacuum advance needs to work for your car to have optimum performance during acceleration. When inoperable the car simply drags until the mechanical advance starts working above 2k RPM. So you really want it to work right.
Above 5000 RPM it is unlikely that the vacuum advance is the issue; however, fix one thing at a time. Your FI computer is compensating for the extra air from the vacuum unit and you need to sort that out. Expect to replace the unit, reset the ignition timing, reset the idle speed screw and stop screw. All very easy to do; I have the procedure documented at my web site http://www.artigue.com/fiat
Bosch L-Jetronic really can't be adjusted for mixture. It can be fooled (very slightly) by modifying the spring tension on the AFM flap, but the air bypass on the AFM body has little affect on mixture. With the system working correctly any adjustment on the air bypass is compensating for once the O2 sensor warms up. I would be inclined to think your previous owner changed the spring tension, which will give you a richer mixture at low RPM but too lean at high RPM (because the door is already fully open but the CPU thinks not). If this is the case you can relieve the spring tension one notch at a time - but finding the factory spot might be tough.
In general L-Jet isn't worth tinkering with. When it all works right the Spider 2000 gets good gas mileage and nice performance. If you want to get more change the pistons to slightly higher compression, it helps.
Above 5000 RPM it is unlikely that the vacuum advance is the issue; however, fix one thing at a time. Your FI computer is compensating for the extra air from the vacuum unit and you need to sort that out. Expect to replace the unit, reset the ignition timing, reset the idle speed screw and stop screw. All very easy to do; I have the procedure documented at my web site http://www.artigue.com/fiat
Bosch L-Jetronic really can't be adjusted for mixture. It can be fooled (very slightly) by modifying the spring tension on the AFM flap, but the air bypass on the AFM body has little affect on mixture. With the system working correctly any adjustment on the air bypass is compensating for once the O2 sensor warms up. I would be inclined to think your previous owner changed the spring tension, which will give you a richer mixture at low RPM but too lean at high RPM (because the door is already fully open but the CPU thinks not). If this is the case you can relieve the spring tension one notch at a time - but finding the factory spot might be tough.
In general L-Jet isn't worth tinkering with. When it all works right the Spider 2000 gets good gas mileage and nice performance. If you want to get more change the pistons to slightly higher compression, it helps.
1970 124 Spider
http://www.artigue.com/fiat
http://www.artigue.com/fiat