Sun Distributor Machine Manometer - Old Hot Rodder
Posted: Sun Feb 01, 2015 4:35 pm
Thanks for letting me in.
Greetings all - New "old" guy here from Norfolk, VA.
I found this while looking for information on the specific gravity of Sun Manometer Fluid. I saw other discussions on manometers. Hopefully, I am not intruding.
To make a short story long---
I have a Sun 506 Distributor Tester Machine which in a nutshell checks and allows for calibration of centrifugal and vacuum advance on old points style distributors at various RPMs of the engine.
Vacuum advance on most distributors is fairly easy to check as it changes in fairly large increments.
For example on a 1957 Ford Y-Block the vacuum advance is as follows:
With the Sun DT at 1,000 Distributor RPM.
There will be 0-1 degrees of advance at 5 inches of vacuum.
There will be 5-7 degrees of advance at 10 inches of vacuum.
There will be 11-13 degrees of advance at 15 inches of vacuum.
There will be 11-13 degrees of advance at 20 inches of vacuum.
Prior to 1957 Ford used a Holley Pressure type of distributor called a Load-O-Matic. It had NO centrifugal advance and only vacuum advance. This vacuum advance operated at a substantially lower vacuum amount.
For example a 1956 312 with a 4bbl the vacuum advance was:
At 300 Distributor RPM: Advance would be 0 - 1/2 degrees at .16 Inches of vacuum. Note that is "point" 16.
At 400 Distributor RPM: Advance would be 0-1 degrees at .29 Inches vacuum.
On up at 800 RPM: 5-1/2 - 6-1/2 degrees at Inches vacuum: .88
at 1200 RPM: 8-1/2 - 9-1/2 degrees at Inches vacuum: 1.27
at 1600 RPM: 11 - 12 degrees at Inches vacuum: 1.73
at 2000 RPM: 13 - 14-1/2 degrees at Inches vacuum: 2.19
Those are inches of Mercury.
Very little vacuum is need to advance the breaker plate.
Sun offered an accessory Manometer for those style of distributors which used Sun Manometer Fluid of an unknown specific gravity for which their Manometers were calibrated. Even Google doesn't know it. At least not now as it has not been available for decades as the Sun DT has not been made for that long. Besides, who but old school hot rodders cares about 1956 Ford distributors? The Sun Manometers are also quite rare and high dollar if one is to be found.
I have two 56 Fords with the LOM distributors. One a 272 and the other is a 312 in a Thunderbird.
Here is my thinking on a viable replacement manometer to allow me to work on these distributors.
I converted the inches of Mercury to Water Column. Here are the numbers I came up with:
272 - 2v
RPM Advance --In Hg --In WC
200 0 --0 --0
300 0+/- 1/2 --0.15 --2.04
400 .25-1.25 --0.28 --3.80
800 6.5-7.5 --0.96 --13.05
1200 11.5-12.75 --2.21 --30.05
1600 14.5-15.5 --3.41 --46.35
2000 16.0-17.25 --4.6 --62.54
272-292-312 - 4v
RPM Advance --In Hg --In WC
200 0 --0 --0
300 0+/- 1/2 --0.16 --2.18
400 0-1 --0.29 --3.94
800 5.5-6.5 --0.88 --11.96
1200 8.5-9.5 --1.27 --17.27
1600 11-12 --1.73 --23.51
2000 13.0-14.25 --2.19 --29.77
I used 1 Inch Of Mercury to 1 Inch Of Water = 13.5955 as the conversion factor.
I am considering using the Dwyer 1211-72 Slack Tube Manometer. That should give me up to the 62.54 WC I need for the 272 2v. I think.
That manometer runs about $100. I have seen how to build one with plastic tubing and making a scale which is a consideration. It may be better to buy one due to the height along with the preciseness and durability that is needed. That is the other consideration.
So, with all that said, my questions are:
1. Do my numbers look correct?
2. Does the Dwyer 1211-72 sound like the best way to go or are there other recommendations?
Jim
Greetings all - New "old" guy here from Norfolk, VA.
I found this while looking for information on the specific gravity of Sun Manometer Fluid. I saw other discussions on manometers. Hopefully, I am not intruding.
To make a short story long---
I have a Sun 506 Distributor Tester Machine which in a nutshell checks and allows for calibration of centrifugal and vacuum advance on old points style distributors at various RPMs of the engine.
Vacuum advance on most distributors is fairly easy to check as it changes in fairly large increments.
For example on a 1957 Ford Y-Block the vacuum advance is as follows:
With the Sun DT at 1,000 Distributor RPM.
There will be 0-1 degrees of advance at 5 inches of vacuum.
There will be 5-7 degrees of advance at 10 inches of vacuum.
There will be 11-13 degrees of advance at 15 inches of vacuum.
There will be 11-13 degrees of advance at 20 inches of vacuum.
Prior to 1957 Ford used a Holley Pressure type of distributor called a Load-O-Matic. It had NO centrifugal advance and only vacuum advance. This vacuum advance operated at a substantially lower vacuum amount.
For example a 1956 312 with a 4bbl the vacuum advance was:
At 300 Distributor RPM: Advance would be 0 - 1/2 degrees at .16 Inches of vacuum. Note that is "point" 16.
At 400 Distributor RPM: Advance would be 0-1 degrees at .29 Inches vacuum.
On up at 800 RPM: 5-1/2 - 6-1/2 degrees at Inches vacuum: .88
at 1200 RPM: 8-1/2 - 9-1/2 degrees at Inches vacuum: 1.27
at 1600 RPM: 11 - 12 degrees at Inches vacuum: 1.73
at 2000 RPM: 13 - 14-1/2 degrees at Inches vacuum: 2.19
Those are inches of Mercury.
Very little vacuum is need to advance the breaker plate.
Sun offered an accessory Manometer for those style of distributors which used Sun Manometer Fluid of an unknown specific gravity for which their Manometers were calibrated. Even Google doesn't know it. At least not now as it has not been available for decades as the Sun DT has not been made for that long. Besides, who but old school hot rodders cares about 1956 Ford distributors? The Sun Manometers are also quite rare and high dollar if one is to be found.
I have two 56 Fords with the LOM distributors. One a 272 and the other is a 312 in a Thunderbird.
Here is my thinking on a viable replacement manometer to allow me to work on these distributors.
I converted the inches of Mercury to Water Column. Here are the numbers I came up with:
272 - 2v
RPM Advance --In Hg --In WC
200 0 --0 --0
300 0+/- 1/2 --0.15 --2.04
400 .25-1.25 --0.28 --3.80
800 6.5-7.5 --0.96 --13.05
1200 11.5-12.75 --2.21 --30.05
1600 14.5-15.5 --3.41 --46.35
2000 16.0-17.25 --4.6 --62.54
272-292-312 - 4v
RPM Advance --In Hg --In WC
200 0 --0 --0
300 0+/- 1/2 --0.16 --2.18
400 0-1 --0.29 --3.94
800 5.5-6.5 --0.88 --11.96
1200 8.5-9.5 --1.27 --17.27
1600 11-12 --1.73 --23.51
2000 13.0-14.25 --2.19 --29.77
I used 1 Inch Of Mercury to 1 Inch Of Water = 13.5955 as the conversion factor.
I am considering using the Dwyer 1211-72 Slack Tube Manometer. That should give me up to the 62.54 WC I need for the 272 2v. I think.
That manometer runs about $100. I have seen how to build one with plastic tubing and making a scale which is a consideration. It may be better to buy one due to the height along with the preciseness and durability that is needed. That is the other consideration.
So, with all that said, my questions are:
1. Do my numbers look correct?
2. Does the Dwyer 1211-72 sound like the best way to go or are there other recommendations?
Jim