Does anyone else think that there may be merit to his statement regarding the timing and emmisions?
Now, I know little about the pumps, but could the dynamic timing setting from the factory also be emissions influenced rather than performance driven, hence there being some merit to what he said?
i know for a fact that NOx emissions are hard to get around with IDI diesels whilst still achieving optimal timing setting for bsfc (brake specific fuel consumption).
I'm going to have to think about this, because I'm having a hard time grasping this. The feed pump is a simple rotary pump. It is always spinning. At low RPM's the pressure regulator isn't doing anything. All the pressure goes straight to the pump. Then when the RPM (and internal pressure) of the feed pump is high enough, the pressure regulator's spring is compressed enough to limit the pressure to that specific point. Above that point the extra diesel is fed back into the intake, instead of the pump. Where is my logic wrong?
What I would like to see from some of you who have dynamic diesel timing devices, (or from any source if it's available,) is a useful way to relate pressure to degrees of advance: maybe a table or graph showing the typical advance-to-pressure curve.