Are you asking about the static advance setting? or the actual total advance under dynamic conditions?
The static advance depends on how you set the pump. Stock, with 0.9mm-1.0mm of plunger movement, it's around 4 to 6 degrees BTDC if my memory is right. To some extent, that varies with wear inside the injection pump.
Dynamic advance depends on engine speed and pump condition. The vane pump/lift pump in the front half of the injection pump pressurizes fuel in the inlet portions of the main distribution pump. That pressure is higher at higher RPM's, and it operates an advance mechanism that works in principle like the centrifugal advance mechanism on the ignition distributor on a gas engine. If the lift pump is weak, the pressure will be lower and the timing will advance less. That's why some pumps seem to deliver a lot more power than other pumps.
And, when you rebuild the pump for performance, in addition to playing with the governor springs and altering the operation of the governor, you can also adjust/modify the advance mechanism and dial in more or less advance at higher RPM's. It's the same concept as re-curving a distributor for a gas engine. What you change is different, but the results are similar.
If you can get a dynamic timing diagnostic meter with the optical sensor that screws into the glow plug hole, you can map out advance vs. RPM's.