Hi Dzltec,
Thanks for your advice, I would appreciate your input to the following overview of whats going on mate.
The reason for first asking about the injector pump was that the diesel chap said that the pump would not cope with the new injectors pressure, he also said that the toyota way of setting the cam belt tension was too high, and that the factory way of setting it was too tight, and would cause premature failure of the injector pump bushes, and thus air leaks etc.
Does this sound right to you ?.
I had the feeling they were trying for an injector pump service o/h .
I did the timing belt when I had the injectors out being serviced.
Set up the tension after rotating engine 4 times etc etc etc. Spring was within spec for length etc.
I could appreciate where he was coming from, however ive tried searching on the forum for anyone else having their injector pump fail, or reduce in performance after getting their injectors cleaned, and I couldnt bring anything up like that, well in all honesty the search function brought up alot of other stuff too.
In this search, I came across the diesel gremlin called an air leak, and am slowly learning about its affect on engine performance, which got me thinking that I should check the basics first.
Ok so im just a mechanic with only petrol diagnosis experiece.
So right back to the basic beginning I thought, instead of following the injector pump road.
I tried checking for air to the filter, then filter to pump, and after pump.
I originally thought that if it pulled a small amount of air into the pump, it would be seperated before getting near the piston and distributor, and thus not affect it, but I assume that once its in past the rotary pump, it airates the diesel, and it goes everywhere, thus affecting its performance.
Am I right in assuming this?
Anyway.
When testing the priming pump, I could see, and hear it leaking air, I removed the top of the pump, and dripped some diesel down into it to see if it would suck the diesel in, and it would show up in the clear line instead of air.
It seems that now after doing that, the leak may have stopped.
I would pump the piston after a few mins of checking the leak, engine running, or engine off for a few mins, and it would be quite easy to pump, and would take a few pumps to bring it up to pressure, say 6 or so.
Today when I tested it, it took 3 pumps to bring it up to pressure, and the first few pumps were quite hard compared to what it was like before.
Is it normal for the priming pump to be easy to pump, and take a bit to get to pressure, or, should it be firm to pump always once its been initially bled of air?
I feel like im running around in circles now as I only know enough to be dangerous
![Twisted Evil :twisted:](./images/smilies/icon_twisted.gif)
but im learning fast, as you do in this trade.
I think I will give it a day or 2 and see if its still the same, and await on yours and others advice before deciding on what action if any to take.
So the real question is what could cause a drop off in performance that ive described earlier. Could an air leak do this, or am I barking up the wrong tree.
Your advice, and opinions are appreciated.
Trains.
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