timings bang on,forgot to chuck the vac pump into the conundrum
,glad someone else can hear it
Rewind here a minute, the timing is bang on in what respect?
Bear in mind the pump is designed to be adjusted independently of the belt position for a reason.
Assuming that when your engine is at TDC the crank and cam both hit the marks and the pump is right by the outer sprocket, that doesn't actually mean your pump timing is bang on.
I would retard the pump a touch - take the cover off the front of the timing case, turn the engine over till you can stick a drill bit through the sprocket into the back of the timing chest.
Then pin it using a drill bit that fits, if it's too advanced it might be a smaller drill 8/8.5mm 9.5mm should fit.
Now, loosen the just a little the bolts that locks the outer pulley to the inner flange.
Now get a socket onto the pump shaft in the middle and nudge the pump back a little this will open the gap up where your drill bit goes, try fitting in a drill bit 0.5mm bigger and then adjust it onto this drill bit so you know you have moved it by 0.5mm.
Now do it all back up and start it...
The last time I did mine, about 2 years ago, I did it by feel and kept an eye on the gap in the hole in the sprocket. I nudged mine clockwise - advanced a nudge, started it, took it for a spin, came back, tweaked it a little more, that was too much so went somewhere in the middle and was happy with that. I did it on a warm engine, not full temperature but the engine had been on it was all warm to the touch. No point having it spot on stone cold.
The important thing is to have a start point, so if all goes to hell you can do back to square one, but to be honest it cannot really go to hell. It's not that difficult, it's like doing valve clearances really. Just a little care and attention.
Could also be a knackered injector...