never touched the gaps other than checking once in a while and haven't changed plugs in 10 years
never needed to....
don't do enough miles
you could open them up a smidge i guess, just delays the point of fire so you'd need to adjust timing, and gives a spark at higher voltage wiith consequently less current. (under the cap from rotor to lead and at the plug)
and you need both I and V , power in watts is voltage x current x time in seconds
proabbly better off venting the dizzy cap
keep in mind a proper HEI dizzy has a diameter of 4-5 inches
and shielded cap and rotor, the route to the next nearest contact at any time is cut off by plastic sheild on the end of the rotor, and the plug wire connectors are miles apart
a standard mopar dizzy expects points sized sparks and the plug wires are closer.
i'd leave the plug gaps alone
but we are straying out of street car territory here....
i did nout but bang in the module and go for a squirt.
having said that this conversion is done in Oz on LPG cars
much harder to ignite due to increased compresion ratio occasionally poor distribution and 105 to 115 RON rated fuel...if they can light that with no cross talk/misfire we should have no probs with petrol
Dave