As I recall, Andy's lines are 57' x .012 solids. On glow, the plane flies remarkably well. I see no reason why ignition, which is a really accurate way to initiate combustion should run worse than the hit or miss of a glow plug triggering the fire at some compression/mixture level.
Andy also seems to have a sag-off at the end of the flight on ignition that makes me think overheating, thus too much advance. My guess is that excess advance should look the same as over-compression, too hot a plug, too large a prop or excess nitro on a glow engine.
So, to my way of thinking, if I were designing an ignition system, I would allow a slight excess of advance to be possible to assure that there will be enough available for optimum setting. With that said, I expect that full advance is normally too much.
This raises the question of how do you set the advance to optimum? On a diesel, you NEVER go for maximum compression, excess is ALWAYS available (and lethal!). Learning how to tune the engine is part of the equation. On glow, you adjust head gaskets, prop, nitro content and plug heat. On a diesel you set the compression and needle, and occasionally ether content. What is the optimum plan for ignition???
Admittedly, I have never run an ignition engine, but I propose that retarding the spark until a slight rpm drop happens may be the way to go. Comments?