This article is about the vacuum advance as far as how it is related to the carburetor. There are many good articles about how the vacuum advance works. There is not much information about how the carburetor enters into this picture.
The Non Ported vacuum on the carburetor feeds vacuum directly from below the throttle plate, or intake manifold vacuum.
For the stock built engine the non ported vacuum advance is the most efficient way to go. However if your engine has all the smog controls that went along with the ported type of carburetor, then you need to stick to that type.
Ported vacuum feeds vacuum from above the throttle plate. This means no vacuum at idle (because the throttle plate is closed). This type of vacuum advance was found with engines that used low initial timing such as 2-4 degrees. This was the 1st attempt at reducing hydrocarbons prior to the catalytic converter.
Follow the vacuum passage with compressed air to see where then vacuum originates. If it originates below the throttle plate, then you have a non ported carburetor. If it originates above the throttle plate, then you have a ported carburetor.
In general most ported vacuum advance carburetors will be found on 1970 & later carburetors.
Are you having idle problems?
You might have a ported vacuum advance type of carburetor, when you actually should be using a non ported type. This might happen when you install a late model carburetor (ported) on a pre 1970 engine.
Looking at the front the left vacuum advance is ported. This should be used on any vehicle that has smog control such as a vacuum canister.
On more basic engine installs use the right port, which is a non ported source.