I'm going to explain something a lot if people don't understand,your engine wants 45-55 degrees of advance at cruise for maximum mpg,it wants a total of 28-38 degrees of advance for maximum acceleration. Now these are imaginary numbers and exaggerated to make the differences more obvious. So your whatever distributor you chose has 20 degrees of centrifugal advance and the springs in it allow this advance at 3000 rpm. You set your timing at 14 degrees,now you've got 34 degrees at 3000 rpm and up you'll probably accelerate good. Now your whatever distributor adds 10 degrees vacuum advance so add that to your 34,now you've got 44. Mmm close enough you aren't going to complain. Here's the fun part,say your cruising speed is 2000 rpms,well now you're centrifugal advance has fallen out,you aren't even close to what you need for mpg. Performance? No problem you're going to mash the pedal,downshift and just like magic you have 34 degrees of timing again for good performance,so everything's great,but you get crappy milage. Because you never tried, you never realized you were leaving performance and mpg on the table. I didn't know how to write this so I'm adding it here. On that same scenario as above if just your springs were lighter allowing full advance at 2000 instead of 3000 you'd have been so much closer to the sweet spot, and getting in the sweet spot is just a few.more tweaks from being there. The average off the shelf distributor is going to be way to conservative,so they don't get detonation complaints and swamped tech lines teaching everyone how to tune.