DEFENDER90-DAZ
New Member
After all that working out i did too
aye but you did put up some impressive numbersYep think he's missing the point mate: ALL pumps will be very slightly different/will have different degrees of wear internally/engine conditions are slightly different/camshaft and valve train wear will be different etc............
How is he going to take any of that into account using his DTI gadget???
Yep think he's missing the point mate: ALL pumps will be very slightly different/will have different degrees of wear internally/engine conditions are slightly different/camshaft and valve train wear will be different etc............
How is he going to take any of that into account using his DTI gadget???
I think he's a troll that likes to use long words to sound clever. Anyone would think he's trying to tune an F1 car with all these numbers and tests. Its a landy,stick some smegging drill bits in and go have some fun with it.
Using smaller 'rods' gives no quantifiable adjustment
somewhere would have an actual quantifiable number. not withstanding numerous parallax angles
We haven't even started on pulse timing yet
( as per previous parallax comment
This thread is rapidly becoming hard work and straying away from the original Q! I was/am looking for a direct answer as to if anyone had any hard and fast numbers that are achieved in some sort of quantifiable way.
Underpinning all this is the condition of the pump, hence my interest in pursuing pulse timing
If its not hit and miss then presumably you have a quantifiable way of achieving and measuring the results?