Ok. . I won't claim this is going to be the best post on the matter. I wrote this down in text form recently. I was asked for it, but, instead, I lost the darn thing when my hard drive got corrupted, including the email address of the guy I was to send it to. So, if you were expecting this by email, I'm sorry, I lost your name and address.
Further, I just got an email asking me to answer the questions asked in another thread. I started a new one so it could easily be found.
First, I'll briefly explain some pump theory and operation, and then the affects of timing and injector changes on engine operation.
Your first gens all have a Bosch VE pump on them. This pump injects fuel by a single, rotating plunger that is forced up by a set of rollers held inside a cage, riding up and down a cam plate. This cam plate is round, and the surface is fluted, so that there are six positions for the rollers to be raised, and six valleys. When the drive shaft spins the cam plate, the rollers then literally walk, in a set of four, up and down the outside edges of the flutes (in reality, the cam plate moves up and down and the rollers stay fixed, but I'm only talking about relative motion here). In one rotation of the drive shaft, the rollers climb and fall six times. The plunger rides on top of the cam plate, and a little pin in a slot makes the pumping plunger rotate at the same speed, and in a fixed location with, the drive shaft. Two sets of very strong springs push the plunger down onto the cam plate, so that it returns to the low part, even at speed. It makes an up-and-down cycle 3 times for each engine rotation. The pump is geared to 1/2 engine speed.
The 'cage' that holds the set of rollers sort of 'floats' in place, but is rotated against the direction of the drive shaft by hydraulic pressure - that generated by the internal vane-type supply pump. By moving against drive shaft rotation, the rollers contact the raised lobes sooner, raising the pumping plunger sooner and voila!, advanced injection timing.
When the pump is first assembled, fuel is flowed through a specific port in the pump at low pressure, and the drive shaft slowly rotated until the ports close - cutting off the flow. The distance from the bottom of the lobes to the cut-off point is then measured, and then set, by means of a spacer, so that every pump has the same distance (plus or minus a small variation) for the plunger to travel before the ports close.
When in operation, the moment the ports close, the fuel is instantly displaced by the upward moving plunger (the ports allowed bleed off until closure) and the high-pressure fuel is then forced out the only opening left - the registered openings between the plunger and the outlet to the injector. Since we know how far the plunger travelled before the ports physically closed, we now have a set spot we can measure with a mechanical device that tells us when the hydraulic event takes place.
Cummins and Bosch have worked out a graph (one I am not privy to) that details how many degrees movement is related to the amount of lift. As with any U curve, the lift starts slow, and acclerates until it reaches some point, where it then decelerates to a stop and reverses course back to the valley.
So, when the engine is assembled, the TDC point is (theoretically) set where the pin locks the cam gear (in real life, we've found this varies, sometimes by several degrees engine rotation) and the pump is also locked at a specific measurement of plunger lift from the valley of the cam plate (or 0 point). This somewhat complicated procedure has been worked out by the engineers to achieve the desired initial injection timing, the rpm related advance, to achieve the desired effects (this is not, of course, necessarily the point of best performance or economy).
When I timed the engine, I used a custom made tool that screwed into the #1 injector hole and created a postive piston stop. I then rotated the engine (by hand, using a wrench) forwards until the piston touched the tool and stopped, whereupon, I marked the dampner and set a magnetic pointer to that exact spot. Then, using the alternator pulley, I rotated the engine backwards (with a wrench, slowly and gently) until the piston again touched the tool poking down the injector hole. Marking the spot, I could then measure the distance between the two marks and divide by half. The center point between the two is true TDC.
By rotating the engine around until the TDC pin will push in, we can then compare the "true" to the "set" TDC points. If they are not the same, we can loosen the pin's two mounting screws and rotate the engine to the true point and tighten the pin holder back up.
The pump is, by using a dial indicator, set to a specific "lift" point, locked by a provided set screw against the drive shaft, and then installed on the engine.
After it is fully tight, the locking screw is loosened, the TDC pin is pulled, and the engine can then be rotated.
Since this is going long... I'll address timing effects on the engine in the next post.
------------------
ICQ 3807791 Power Wagon
www.my2kcity.com/powerwagon
Mark Koskenmaki, General Diesel Moderator
Further, I just got an email asking me to answer the questions asked in another thread. I started a new one so it could easily be found.
First, I'll briefly explain some pump theory and operation, and then the affects of timing and injector changes on engine operation.
Your first gens all have a Bosch VE pump on them. This pump injects fuel by a single, rotating plunger that is forced up by a set of rollers held inside a cage, riding up and down a cam plate. This cam plate is round, and the surface is fluted, so that there are six positions for the rollers to be raised, and six valleys. When the drive shaft spins the cam plate, the rollers then literally walk, in a set of four, up and down the outside edges of the flutes (in reality, the cam plate moves up and down and the rollers stay fixed, but I'm only talking about relative motion here). In one rotation of the drive shaft, the rollers climb and fall six times. The plunger rides on top of the cam plate, and a little pin in a slot makes the pumping plunger rotate at the same speed, and in a fixed location with, the drive shaft. Two sets of very strong springs push the plunger down onto the cam plate, so that it returns to the low part, even at speed. It makes an up-and-down cycle 3 times for each engine rotation. The pump is geared to 1/2 engine speed.
The 'cage' that holds the set of rollers sort of 'floats' in place, but is rotated against the direction of the drive shaft by hydraulic pressure - that generated by the internal vane-type supply pump. By moving against drive shaft rotation, the rollers contact the raised lobes sooner, raising the pumping plunger sooner and voila!, advanced injection timing.
When the pump is first assembled, fuel is flowed through a specific port in the pump at low pressure, and the drive shaft slowly rotated until the ports close - cutting off the flow. The distance from the bottom of the lobes to the cut-off point is then measured, and then set, by means of a spacer, so that every pump has the same distance (plus or minus a small variation) for the plunger to travel before the ports close.
When in operation, the moment the ports close, the fuel is instantly displaced by the upward moving plunger (the ports allowed bleed off until closure) and the high-pressure fuel is then forced out the only opening left - the registered openings between the plunger and the outlet to the injector. Since we know how far the plunger travelled before the ports physically closed, we now have a set spot we can measure with a mechanical device that tells us when the hydraulic event takes place.
Cummins and Bosch have worked out a graph (one I am not privy to) that details how many degrees movement is related to the amount of lift. As with any U curve, the lift starts slow, and acclerates until it reaches some point, where it then decelerates to a stop and reverses course back to the valley.
So, when the engine is assembled, the TDC point is (theoretically) set where the pin locks the cam gear (in real life, we've found this varies, sometimes by several degrees engine rotation) and the pump is also locked at a specific measurement of plunger lift from the valley of the cam plate (or 0 point). This somewhat complicated procedure has been worked out by the engineers to achieve the desired initial injection timing, the rpm related advance, to achieve the desired effects (this is not, of course, necessarily the point of best performance or economy).
When I timed the engine, I used a custom made tool that screwed into the #1 injector hole and created a postive piston stop. I then rotated the engine (by hand, using a wrench) forwards until the piston touched the tool and stopped, whereupon, I marked the dampner and set a magnetic pointer to that exact spot. Then, using the alternator pulley, I rotated the engine backwards (with a wrench, slowly and gently) until the piston again touched the tool poking down the injector hole. Marking the spot, I could then measure the distance between the two marks and divide by half. The center point between the two is true TDC.
By rotating the engine around until the TDC pin will push in, we can then compare the "true" to the "set" TDC points. If they are not the same, we can loosen the pin's two mounting screws and rotate the engine to the true point and tighten the pin holder back up.
The pump is, by using a dial indicator, set to a specific "lift" point, locked by a provided set screw against the drive shaft, and then installed on the engine.
After it is fully tight, the locking screw is loosened, the TDC pin is pulled, and the engine can then be rotated.
Since this is going long... I'll address timing effects on the engine in the next post.
------------------
ICQ 3807791 Power Wagon
www.my2kcity.com/powerwagon
Mark Koskenmaki, General Diesel Moderator