Plug a cable from the stop solenoid directly to the battery +. Start engine. To stop it, simply unplug that cable from the baterry and it will stop the engine. This is a good test to know if the solenoid is working or not.Anyway, you can unbolt the solenoid, remove the inside blac plastic cap (that tiny thing does the work, comes out pulling) and the spring, then bolt back to the pump. That way you'll have to stall the engine to stop it, though. :wink:
The 155 bar nozzles have substantially advanced your timing (NAs are timed assuming 130 bar nozzles) and 1.05 is substantially advanced beyond the 0.95ish the NA engine is normally timed at.White smoke can also a sign of advanced timing.I'd suggest substantially retarding your pump timing... 0.90mm perhaps since you have 155 injectors... and then see if it will start.Three notch gasket won't cause your car not to start, nor will not using the advance mechanism, assuming the car is not in the frozen north !!
Well, sorry to hear that you dug that deep and didn't find the solution. FWIW, the vanes usually stick from the fuel drying up and leaving a residue and not necessarily from rust. Rust would be worst case scenario. What is the history behind the car? What was the incentive behind rebuilding the head? Was it running prior to that?Andrew
I seriously doubt that the problem keeping it from running is compression related. When you get it back together you should try running it from a separate container of fuel. Andrew