Turboman
Mab An Gov
I agree
I have heard that there's quite a bit of slack in this part of the system so care is needed: Even a special wind it up tight special tool...
Also a possibility. It might be most useful for the cam chains.
I agree
I have heard that there's quite a bit of slack in this part of the system so care is needed: Even a special wind it up tight special tool...
Running out of pump adjustment is a common prob if the valve timing is incorecty set...if you have only worked on the pump drive gear you have not touched the valve timing...although you say you fitted a new timing chain...how did you keep the timing set when you did this...
Its meant to be done with the aid of dial gauges on the number 1 valve...with out l;ooking at the book I cant remember if its exh or inlet...its quite a tricky job as there engines have no timing marks bar the ones on the flywheel...even they can be confusing.
My mate has the complete 3 point plough.
You maybe better starting from scratch with the pump/valve timing.
My 200 is fitted as a 200DI...I took the turbo off...bags of power and more economical than the turbo version.
And its kind to my std S3 gearbox.
Nick.
Hi Nick, I followed the green book and used a dual gauge on number one valve. I am sure I set that correctly. I am still concerned about not setting the gear under the pump. I think I will try that next. There is little information on setting this without using that special gauge .Running out of pump adjustment is a common prob if the valve timing is incorecty set...if you have only worked on the pump drive gear you have not touched the valve timing...although you say you fitted a new timing chain...how did you keep the timing set when you did this...
Its meant to be done with the aid of dial gauges on the number 1 valve...with out l;ooking at the book I cant remember if its exh or inlet...its quite a tricky job as there engines have no timing marks bar the ones on the flywheel...even they can be confusing.
My mate has the complete 3 point plough.
You maybe better starting from scratch with the pump/valve timing.
My 200 is fitted as a 200DI...I took the turbo off...bags of power and more economical than the turbo version.
And its kind to my std S3 gearbox.
Nick.
I can't see any information about which screw adjusts this so may have to take it to an agent.
Completely agree - with out the test facilities (and for many pumps the factory specifications that are often very difficult to obtain) messing about with injection pumps is not a smart move. Removing, refitting and timing them for many people is a big enough challenge.There is a reason for that. And it is that injection pumps are not suited to amateur interference.
I have been working on diesels for 35 years, and I never touch injection pumps, except for minor repairs. I just take it to the agent, they know what to do, and have a test machine to test their work.
whether its at 20 degrees or near that depends on accuracy of cam timing, and thats the only way you can adjust thatDear all, I am back.....a few family issues have taken me away from my series 3 SWB 2.25 diesel.
To recap, I have a smoke issue...lots of grey smoke when I put my foot down. I have fitted a new tank, a new fuel pump, new injectors, new timing chain and reset the timing as per the green book. I have had the injector pump tested with the injectors and all ok. I have just had the compression tested and all cylinder over 400 psi. So I am now back to the fuel pump timing.....I did try the pump in every possible position with now success but I am going to try again. The only thing I have not been able to test is the position of the vertical drive gear that drives the pump and if it is at 20 degrees.....I don't have the special gauge. Does anyone have other things I can try?