Just curious, what would be gained by doing this ?
I think
@oldbee and
@AR67GTX covered it.
But to add a bit: There are basically two reasons we want advance:
1) The air fuel mixture does not explode. At a given air/fuel mixture, it burns at the same rate. So as the engine goes faster we need to light the fire sooner so the pressure wave hits at the ideal spot (fractions after piston TDC). This is the job of centrifugal advance in the distributor.
2) The air/fuel mixture is not constant. As fuel mixture gets leaner the flame burns slower, so we again need to light the fire sooner. This is the job of vacuum advance.
Most basically, if you agree with #1, then it is better if the distributor can give us more timing rather than less. If your distributor could only provide 12* of timing would you then want the engine set to 24*? What if the distributor could only do 10*? You can see were this is going.
As an additional point: Typically, at idle your engine runs lean, so getting vacuum advance involved to increase the timing at idle is a good thing. And, as mentioned, we don't want too much static timing as it can make the car harder to start. So lowering the static timing and letting vacuum advance take over provides the timing the engine wants. Then when you mash the throttle, vacuum goes away, and so does the additional timing. BUT you have introduced a fat air/ fuel mixture by the accelerator pump, so you don't need as much. Now as your engine speeds up centrifugal advance takes over.
Hope some of this makes sense.