I have to agree, before fitting the Alton system, i had the timing set to 31BTDC, (with a Pazon EI) and to be fair every now and then it kicked back good..About 20 years ago I did a lot of experimenting on a dyno with varying ignition timing. Norton twins seem to have a very good combustion chamber shape compared to say Triumoh twins. Varying full advance between 28 and 31 deg seem to have no repeatable significant differences on my bike. Getting the carb rightward more important for optimal performance.
However I have read some motors do prefer less advance with higher compression, different piston crown shape and squish if any.
Some of the advance curve is affected by the electronic circuit, but much of it is due to Faraday's law of induction which states that the field is proportional to the velocity of the magnet. This causes the threshold voltage in the pickup coil to be reached earlier with increasing RPM. DynoDave's experiments showed that when a Mk.3 falls below about 10.7 volts, the timing gets increasingly erratic with error bar width proportional to the drop below that voltage....Black Box Boyers use the battery to RETARD the curve, not advance, as many (me) assumed...
If you set it to 28 degrees the header pipes will turn black , and be searing hot , 31 degrees on mine, runs great .Greetings,
After 26 years the Boyer crapped out on my 72 Intestate. I ordered a new one and the instructions said to set the engine to 31 degrees BTDC.
The book list 28 degrees BTDC as full advance.
What's up with that?
I left it set to 28 BTDC.
When the Boyer crapped out I looked into the tri-spark, it was double the price of the Boyer, This bike has ran great the 5 years I've had it, so I couldn't justify paying the extra $$$.When I looked into electronic ignitiuons to replace my Boyer (as something was just not right), I asked Steve at TriSpark for the ignition advance curve.
I was happy that when I set max advance at 28 degrees, the under 500 rpm timing would be ATDC which would protect my Alton from kickback.
What was surprising is that before the TriSpark, it would stall when cold. But after I put on the TriSpark, and had not touched the Mikuni, it did not stall when cold and idles quite well
Dennis
You likely have a combat engine in your ‘72. Leave the timing at 28degrees BTDC unless you are using 100 octane leaded fuel.Greetings,
After 26 years the Boyer crapped out on my 72 Intestate. I ordered a new one and the instructions said to set the engine to 31 degrees BTDC.
The book list 28 degrees BTDC as full advance.
What's up with that?
I left it set to 28 BTDC.
Pazon is similar price to Boyer, but better with low voltage.When the Boyer crapped out I looked into the tri-spark, it was double the price of the Boyer, This bike has ran great the 5 years I've had it, so I couldn't justify paying the extra $$$.
Yes, i read that, but the Mk4 on my last T160 wasn't great at starting on the button.Boyer MK4 has the Pazon low volt mods, the Boyer MK3 does not.
There is significant manufacturing variation between Boyer analog units giving different advance ranges spanning several degrees. I could see changes in spacing between the rotor and stator causing additional advance range variability....I can't understand why so many have problems with kickback...