You checked the vac. advance right. You might want to do it for about 30 sec. to make sure that it doesn't leak down because of any pin holes (pinch hose with pliers), but there probably isn't. The reason that you see the timing change when you increase/decrease is a combination of the vac. advance starting to have an effect, but most of that is the advance weights in the dist. turning faster and centrifugal force causing them to sling out further and turn the advance plate in the distributor, which moves the position of the points or pick up, whatever you have. That's why when we wanted the motor to rev faster we would change the advance springs on the advance weights in the distributor. I'm not really familiar with the H.E.I. distributors, they were coming out and being used as I was getting out of it. If that dist. is still setup like I'm used to, the advance plate is what you see when you remove the cap and rotor, under that plate is where the advance weights and springs are located. The advance weights are shaped strange. There's 2 of them opposite of each other. I can't remember weather the springs are on the top of them or under. If you mess with the springs, be careful and have a magnet handy. They have a bad habit of getting away from you and going all the way down in the distributor. I can't be sure but, I'm thinking that stronger springs bring the advance later and lighter springs bring it in earlier. For some reason, that doesn't sound quite right, so ask somebody to be sure. Remember that I said that I'm not real familiar with the H.E.I. distributors, so you might ask somebody to make sure about them too. Yours does have the Ginormus size dist cap with the coil in the cap itself, right? Can you adjust the dwell on that dist. through the little door in the front of the cap, or do you adjust dwell at all?
Get a manual that goes back to engines that had distributors with points and comes up to the H.E.I. distributors. I don't know what years that would be if it has the H.E.I. distributors and goes back a few years from there, it probably has the years that you need.
I might be wrong but, when we quoted cam specs. something like .420/.440, we were talking about the intake and exhaust lift specs for the intake and exhaust. Cams have been described several ways including stock,mild,warm,race, full race. There was degrees of overlap which has alot to do with economy and how it chopped. The numbers on the cam that you quoted, if I'm right means that going through 1.5 to 1 rockers gave you (.420 x 1.5 = .630 lift at the valve and figure .440 the same way).
Hope that I'm right about enough of this to be useful. Please do check with someone that is more up to speed with the new technology. I've been out of cars and racing for about 25 or more years. I'm just now trying to get help to understand some of this new stuff. I have a '90 GMC Jimmy 1500 that I parked about 8 years ago, and it was still running. Gas mileage was killing me.
If you think that I can help you, send me e-mail, I check it most often. (
[email protected]) By the way, where are you?
Best of luck, Paul