| Agustin de la Calle wrote:
> 
> Hi there,
> 
> Last Sunday at the Brookline auto museum I saw a red MGB with a normal
> engine. I mean no turbo or compresor, but it had a vaccum gauge.
> Does anybody know why a vacuum gauge would be of some help here?
> 
> Cheers,
>         Gus
Well, I have used a vaccum gage to look at manifold pressure to aid in 
the fine tuning the timing on my B.  Since my car has a non-standard 
exhaust, and carb, and the fact the fuel mixtures are different today 
than 20 years ago, the factory "book-spec" is no longer exactly right 
for my car.  Adjusting the timing for maximum manifold vaccum (without 
obvious backfires or pinging obviously), and then adjusting fuel-air 
mixture results in a strong running engine w/o the benefit of an 
exhaust gas-analyzer.  But mounting one in a car?  I can't understand 
that.
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