An explanation is required here. It isn't simply a vehicle with a carb, it is also any vehicle with a vacuum advance distributor. Anything that changes the vacuum on the lines to your carb and the distributor NEEDS to be measured and adjusted for the highest vacuum, and then the timing needs to be reset. The vacuum changes the timing at the distributor, (a forgotten fact with current technology vehicles) so when the vehicle is set properly at idle the vacuum is highest and the timing is at full advance. When vacuum drops, timing starts to retard, to compensate for engine speed. As such the vacuum needs to be removed from the distributor, the vac line plugged so as not to affect the engines running, and timing set to the engine's specs. and the line reconnected.it could be the cto but you should always redo your time when you do any thing with fuel delivery on a vehicle with a carb. just put a vacuum gauge on the line going to the dist and set it as high as possible by setting your mixture screws and then your distributor. you will have to do it a few times to get it perfect because as you set one, the other changes slightly, but its very easy. once you have it as high as possible, turn the mixture screws back a half inch on the gauge. then your carb will be set as well as possible, and so will your time, for your engine.
An explanation is required here. It isn't simply a vehicle with a carb, it is also any vehicle with a vacuum advance distributor. Anything that changes the vacuum on the lines to your carb and the distributor NEEDS to be measured and adjusted for the highest vacuum, and then the timing needs to be reset. The vacuum changes the timing at the distributor, (a forgotten fact with current technology vehicles) so when the vehicle is set properly at idle the vacuum is highest and the timing is at full advance. When vacuum drops, timing starts to retard, to compensate for engine speed. As such the vacuum needs to be removed from the distributor, the vac line plugged so as not to affect the engines running, and timing set to the engine's specs. and the line reconnected.
I think further explanation is needed here: The above is completely correct WHEN you are running full manifold vac to the dist and NOT ported vac. Ported vac works the opposite of full manifold vac, it will have 0 or little vac at idle and vac will increase as load is applied up to a point then will start to drop off just like full manifold vac. full manifold vac starts high and stays there up to a certain point then begins to drop off. Most 76-86 cj,s are running ported vac from the factory. I would use a timing light to set timing and a vac gauge to adjust the carb to highest vac.