Thanks everyone for your feedback, always.
Whenever I am not able to get on water, I'd like to find some trouble with my boat.
So my boat works good last season. It has 1000rpm idle non-engaged, 650 engaged, 5000rpm at WOT with 17 pitch on a 17 ft boston whaler. The powerhead is new, I mean brand new for 2 years. Ignition system is distributer + trigger, all brand new. Has a enricher installed so the cold start is fantastic.
My only concern is this 1000 rpm idle. I really wish it is 800 rpm non-engaged and 650 engaged. 1000 rpm introduced no trouble. But 800 rpm really keeps me always worried.
When I was with 800 rpm, it bogged down after I rapidly turned full throttle to idle. I believe it is the water coming along with the full speed boat causing more load on the prop. It also occasionally stalled when I tried to launch the boat.
Last week, I re-wired the plug wire of 40 years old and re-checked the timing. My pointer is 2 degree off TDP. I use the 0.464 method precisely and repeatedly this time. I don't know why it can be off, because last time it was also set by the same way of 0.464. So the max timing was not 20 deg, it is 18 deg now. The primary pick up was not 5 deg, it's 3 deg now. I have redone the primary pick up to 5.8 degree and max advance to 19 degree. I am also switching the fuel from 87 10% ethanol to non-ethanol 87.
I hope these adjustment can help to set the idle to 800 rpm non-engaged.
As back to the primary pickup timing, some guy mentions when you have more advanced timing in idling, you will have more power under load in idling, thus more stable idle performance. For example, when I use idle screw to adjust the idle rpm, 0 deg - 6 deg will increase the rpm from 500 to 1000 rpm, then the throttle is picked up at 6 deg, and more power will come from the throttle as I keep advancing the timing from 6. If I set the primary pick up at 4 deg, 0 - 4 deg will increase the rpm from 500-800 rpm; the 4-6 deg will increase rpm from 800 to 1200 rpm because more fuel kicks in. I want more room for the idling to increase the power purely from advance of the timing not from the open of throttle. So I think 6 deg is better in my case.
But the other guy also mentions some race guys use 21 deg as the primary pick up. It will be advanced to max timing before opening the throttle. That is just an extreme case as others point out, which will cause detonation and damage the engine.
So far, I have set up the timing to 6 deg at pick up and 19 deg at max, and switched to the non-ethanol fuel, with a brand new set of spark wire. Hope I can tune it up at 800 rpm. BTW, I am also setting the mix screw with the method repeatedly mentioned in this forum.
Edit:
Some other thought here, maybe it's better to ask here:
1. I use the static method to set the timing. But I did check it with a timing light. The static method is pretty accurate, at cranking, idling. But some mentions at full advanced and WOT, the max advanced is 2 degree less. If it is set at 19 deg at cranking, it will be 17 deg full speed. This statement is not trust-worthy, but still worth to ask.
2. My motor is 115 and I set it to 19 deg max. Most time I cruise around at 3500 rpm and 25 mph. So I guess non-ethanol 87 octane is good enough? No need to the premium?