Hunting down a very strange idle issue has me wondering about the ignition timing. The idle issue is detailed here
Basically, the idle likes to drop from 1,200 RPM into a steady and choppy low 900 RPM that does not respond to the idle screw. Plugs are tan, and the idle doesn't "sag" and return like a rich pilot symptom. I have new coils, a Dyna S, fresh plugs and wires, etc. This keeps happening with fresh wires, coils and plugs, so I wonder if the forward timing on the bike is off. In other words, if the idle works at 1,500+ but slightly struggles below that, perhaps the timing falls apart at the very bottom end of the range.
Another clue in this puzzle is the Dyna timing method and my terrible skills. Dyna says to static time the ignition against the advance marks, which are the right-hand F marks.
I did this when I installed the ignition, and it is a very fiddly process. The instructions literally say to hold the rotor clockwise and then turn the engine (also clockwise) until the light comes on. Even with three hands to hold the wrench, timing light and the advancer rotor, getting a wrench on the engine to turn it while keeping the advancer in that position against the spring tension is a severe PITA. IIRC, I ended up having to get it close with the engine and then turn the rotor to sneak up on the timing mark. So I am suspicious of those timing results.
I have tried just going with the points timing process, where you leave the advancer alone, and reference the left-hand marks. For whatever reason, that didn't work well with the Dyna, and the light never came on IIRC. I have been able to somewhat confirm/set non-advanced ignition timing with a grounded plug, but that is pretty fiddly too and requires keeping an eye on the timing marks and the spark. Sometimes you can hear the spark fire, though.
So does anyone have ideas on how else to drill down into the low RMP timing?
Are there any tricks for keeping the advancer rotated to better time the ignition per the Dyna instructions?
TIA
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