The factory tried many ways to regulate vacuum to the distributor vacuum advance over the years. None of them were overly successful especially the TSC systems used starting in 1970.
One of the problems they experienced was having manifold vacuum advance active at idle speed. This thru emissions off the scale and with some engines they lost control of the idle speed with too much timing.
They also tried timing retard set-ups at idle speed which were pretty hopeless. In the 1980's they used valves to reduce vacuum/timing at idle put not kill it off completely then bring it on with engine speed increases.
I've had the best success over the years just running vacuum directly to the distributor and bypassing all those devices/components. Big advocates of manifold vacuum advance will often jump in and say that it works better than ported vacuum, but there are simply engine combinations that don't like, want, need or respond to a chit ton of timing at idle speed.
I tell folks here to use what works best for what you are doing. If your engine likes 20, 25 or 30 degrees timing at idle then add it in with the appropriate VA unit to your base timing via manifold vacuum. If your engine combo doesn't make enough vacuum at idle for that deal you can buy a "special" vacuum advance to reduce the spring tension so it applies at really low vacuum. I NEVER go that route here, but it is an option and often required for folks who like really tight LSA cams, low vacuum at idle, and menacing idle quality........Cliff