also remember.. only believe the gauge when:-
1) all cylinders are firing
2) you can pull smoothly through the rpm from idle to your desired rpm
3) there are no rich or lean flat spots
if there is a flat spot the rpm before it gives a better indication on the gauge of the direction you are going than the mess you see as it tries to recover afterwards
the sensor was made for a FI set up.... it expects the fuel control to be within the boundaries of an ECU i.e all cylinders firing and no flat spots
it does not work when the range of wrongness is a wide as what is possible with a carb and ignition timing based on springs and weights and position
i tune to 13.5 at WOT but on the way if it dips into the 12s i don't care i have the equivalent of 1 carb per cylinder so hours have been spent messing about with this stuff
car will run fine in the 11s at WOT.. without the gauge you would never know
at that RPM it will lap up what is thrown in, at least until you foul up the plugs.
Also at that rpm and load, any waste fuel is out the tail pipe it is not going to have a chance of wetting the cylinder walls. its too hot in there for that.
it will get hotter quicker and you will feel it as a "something not quite right" at 15 upwards
very useful tool , in a tool box of common sense some helpful pointers, a decent timing light and the right ignition curve for today (modern gas) and your state of tune (CR cam headers etc).
so i'm just passing on the helpful pointers i got off another bloke (some would say i have no common sense to pass on
)
served me well and stopped me diving down rabbit holes for months at a time
get it more or less right
then use the gauge to really get it right
dave