One thing that will happen the more the spark is advanced is that the CHTs will climb. 25 BTC on Lycomings is on the older 360s. Lycoming has revised their recommendations on the later ones, as much as down to 20 BTC. Mine is an older model, but I persuaded my IA to change the timing to 20 BTC. I know this sounds like heresy, but I can't feel any difference in power at 20 BTC vs. 25 BTC, but my CHTs are cooler according to my Insight G1.
I have considered the Electroair, which replaces one mag, at $3570 plus whatever it would cost to be installed (I'm not skilled enough to do it, even with my IA breathing on my neck). They claim a 10% improvement in gas burn. Since I now burn 9.8 gph, presumably I would burn 8.8 approximately. Right now, a thousand mile trip theoretically takes 85.2 gallons (1000 nautical miles / 115 knots x 9.8 gph = 85.2 gallons). At $4.52/gallon that I paid today, that would cost $385. But if I burned 8.8 gph, it would be 76.5 gallons, or $345, a savings of $40. I would have to fly 89,250 nautical miles, or 776 hours, to just pay for the parts in fuel savings. Since they don't offer a representative time for installation, I don't know what that would add to the cost.
Electroair also claims more power and higher altitude capabilities, but doesn't say how much of either. With its draggy airframe, I doubt that there would be any noticeable speed increase, but of course, the best use of more power would be better climb.
In any event, while I seem to have had no hesitancy to spend beau coup bucks on items that seem to provide benefits that I can use, I'm not yet persuaded that Electroair offers that much.
Cary



