Advancing Cam Question

The crank got turned clock-wise, though it went against what I thought was right. My buddy was very sharp about stuff like that, so I went with what he said (on our stocker). Seems he was wrong.
My crank gear must be marked wrong. I checked several times to make sure I was lined up with the "A".

I have the tools to do it. I put it on 108, what MP recommended. It was easier because the engine was on a stand, and the intake manifold wasn't on. I did it the way I did this time, because it has hydraulics and I didn't want a bleeding lifter to throw me off, nor did I want to pull the manifold to put a solid lifter in it.

I did it to try to help it pull harder on the track, as I mentioned. I guess I'll find out the cam being retarded helps!

When I go the changes will be: the cam retard, taller tires (26 to 28), a vent whistle in the primary side, and the jetting I had in the summer (72-75 instead of the 74-77). So that's too many things. I can always play with jets and take the whistle out, but the tires and cam are, of course, staying.

I didn't expect this to get so involved. I'm no technical writer, so it's hard to follow.

Thanks to all who helped.

What confuses the stuff even more is the multiple key ways are on the crank and not the cam.

In reality you are RETARDING the crank with those timing sets rather than advancing the cam.

The end result is the same but if you don’t understand you have to retard the crank rather than advance the cam it can make it easier to think it through.

Of course, if you wanted to retard the cam and you had a multiple key way gear on the crank you’d want to ADVANCE the crank to retard the cam.

Hopefully that makes sense. The fact of it is using timing sets like those you move the crank to get what you want and not the cam.

And to do that you have to think backwards or you end up moving the cam timing the wrong way.