Having a timing issue on the rabbit (I've never done this before). 1.6 N/A
All the prerequisites are done: TDC mark on the flywheel lines up perfectly with the locked cam (#1 lobes up/valves closed), pin slips right into its hole on the pump. I remove the pin and lock, thread the adaptor into the pump and insert dial gauge, giving some preload, and snug up the collar. Then I rotate the engine COUNTER clockwise (as if I'm trying to loosen the crank bolt) until the gauge stops reading [weird behavior part: #1 The gauge doesn't begin moving immediately, I get probably 5 or 10 degrees of crank rotation before it moves, but then it moves evenly and smoothly. The needle on the dial indicator goes around twice and change, then stops moving... #2 but if I overshoot by more than a couple degrees of crank rotation, the dial indicator begins to reverse... ie, there is very little flat spot there). Zero the gauge. Rotate CLOCKWISE until TDC again [#3 again, it moves smoothly until a good bit before TDC, then it stop moving and remains where it stopped, up to TDC]. This measurement is consistently 2.17mm. I've nailed it over and over and over and over.
I bought myself a cheapy chinese gauge from H&H that reads metric and has a 10mm range, it has a big hand that counts up to 1mm, and a little face that keeps track of rotations. It's going around twice, then ending at 17. I'm reading this as 2.17, no? I'm also recording that much going in--ie, if I preload the gauge to 3.00 before I begin counterclocking, I'm around .83 when it stops changing). I also tried this with a gauge from my girlfriend's father which is much nicer and got the same reading (his only goes up to .5mm on each go-round, so it goes around 4 times then reads 17.) I pulled the vacuum pump to give myself some room and I haven't reinstalled the injection lines yet, so there's definitely nothing exerting pressure on the gauge. I've also tried inserting the gauge loosely in the adaptor and then threading the adapter in. No change.
What in the world am I doing wrong?
Backstory: Just redid the head gasket and pass motor mount, which required me to unbolt the pump... so I had the sprocket off. I just did the timing belt 1000 miles ago so I didn't replace it this time. No major hiccups along the way, belt went on reasonably easily, adjusted cam a tiny bit to match TDC. Pump sprocket has its woodruff key in place, little timing notch on the pump mount lines up. Engine turns over happily with the wrench. When I did the timing belt in December I just locked everything and slipped the old one off and the new on because I didn't have the adaptor thing to thread into the pump. It ran fine before and after that.
Q: I wasn't careful to not rotate the pump in the removal/installation process (the sprocket was stubborn and required a puller, which meant I had to remove the locking pin to get the puller arms on). Is it possible that the pump is 360* out of wack--the way the flywheel reads TDC twice for every one rotation of the cam? I've never been inside the pump, but from my understanding this ISN'T possible--one rotation of the sprocket = 1 rotation of the pump piston = all 4 cylinders have been injected... so if the woodruff key is indexing the sprocket to the pump and the locking pin fits, the pumps is correctly installed in the ballpark.
I feel like the fact that the gauge doesn't move in the territory immediately shy of TDC means I've got something way off... but I can't figure out what. The car ran fine, if a little slow (hey, it's a N/A diesel), for the last 50k miles I've owned it.
Thanks.
Luke
edit: Maarten had a similar problem in this thread:
http://www.vwdiesel.net/forum/index.php?topic=10466.0...but there's no clear resolution.