Side question : what was the value of almost tripling the internal pressure @ idle? What did you gain?
Yeah there shouldn't be any change to the pressure received by the injectors as a result of changing the pump internal pressure. The internal pressure only affects the low pressure side of the pump, it doesn't have any bearing on the actual fuel delivery portion.Any other changes? Are you sure they're actually leaking at the halves, and not at the return lines? Often when the return lines are leaking the fuel seeps in to the threads between the two halves of the injector bodies and will cause them to APPEAR to be leaking from there, when they are actually leaking from the return lines. Those return lines do degrade on their own over time btw.
Mark, how do you determine successful shield re-use? You really don't know until removal + inspection. The shield has 2 sealing surfaces on the nozzle side and one on the head side. The head side is a flare type seal. The nozzle side has an outer and inner seal. The outer is a flat surface and the inner is a cone that gets crushed against the nozzle to form a seal. On one of the shield that was re-used once, when pulled, I noticed the outer seal was not sealing properly. There was a burn mark on part of the nozzle face where it should be a shinny ring.I'll be ordering new shields.to replace the temporary re-used ones.
You lost your credit cards because you used it as a thickness gauge re-setting the shields. The shields became magnetized from the magnetic pick up tool and erased the coding on your cards. How fast will you see bubbling diesel at inj to cyl head threads from a heat shield leak? Mine are dry but the black burn mark on the nozzle face did not give me a good feeling.
Quote from: 92EcoDiesel Jetta on October 27, 2011, 05:12:33 amYou lost your credit cards because you used it as a thickness gauge re-setting the shields. The shields became magnetized from the magnetic pick up tool and erased the coding on your cards. How fast will you see bubbling diesel at inj to cyl head threads from a heat shield leak? Mine are dry but the black burn mark on the nozzle face did not give me a good feeling.From dry, a few days.Nothing really definitive, quicker if diesel spilt when priming. Leaks come and go, mostly cured by retrimming the leakoff rubbers.I try and install them about 2" longer than minimum to allow trimming.
If it's not definitive, then it's not good!What I am concerned with is if there's a leak past the shield but not past the threads in the head, carbon soot will slowly pack itself into the threads of the head and the spaces below it and make the injector removal very difficult down the road.
Quote from: wdkingery on October 25, 2011, 05:04:40 pmSide question : what was the value of almost tripling the internal pressure @ idle? What did you gain? FYI, 20 psi @ 1000 rpm is 3x lower than spec. All I did was to bring it back to spec. Result was more power.