Combustion occurs before the piston reaches TDC. Pressure is exerted on the piston while it is still rising which generates a force that tries to drive the engine backwards, opposing the starter which is driving the engine forwards. If you have enough advance, when combustion occurs it can actually stop the engine turning for a moment.
Only a problem at cranking rpm. When the engine is running, by the time decent pressure is developed in the combustion chamber after the spark event, the engine has gone past TDC. But with a lot of advance you will experience "pinking" if you apply high load to the engine at low rpm. Basically the same cause, but the momentum of the rotating parts keeps the engine turning forward (instead of the starter).
Cheers... jondee86
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