The 1600 engine in my Fulvia had been rebuilt in the 1980s and the head had been planed, presumably just to flatten it, but it must have a slightly higher CR than usual. When I put it back on the road in the mid 90s it suffered badly from pinking, and I experimented with modifying a distributor. To restrict the amount of automatic advance I limited the movement of the weights by adding weld to the slots in the plate and filing it to shape so that the movement was half the original, which I think meant 6.5 degrees ‘static advance’ rather than 13. This was a mod that Barry Waterhouse was aware of and I asked his opinion before doing it.
I think it improved things a bit and enabled me to set the engine up for a reasonable tick-over and not too horrible pinking when under load, although it was still necessary to be gentle in opening up the throttles. Some time later I rebuilt the 42mm carbs, which seemed to improve things even more. I then experimented with octane boosters as they became more readily available, which seemed to solve all my problems.
I am now back with the unmodified distributor. I use Tesco 99 petrol when available (as far as I know this is the only popular option which is 99 octane), or standard 95 unleaded with Castrol Valvemaster Plus to bring this up to 99 octane. Both of which seem to work well for normal road use. If I ever venture back into track-day use I will again use 99 plus octane booster, which seemed to work very well when I last did Castle Combe in 2007.
Colin