Re: The FIP. The position of the rack determines the amount of flow from the pump. At minimum(toward rear of car) the rack rotates the pistons to minimum flow for idle. The internal lever for barometric and WRD compensation is at zero. At higher altitudes(less fuel) and cold engine(more fuel) this lever compensates fuel flow by moving the rack back or forward. The only other ways to move the rack are the 'Start' relay, the throttle, and on some the 'decel' relay. (And with the 5 mm screw.)
The WRD theoretically depresses the internal lever to move the rack backwards as the engine warms to operating temp(60 C or so). The WRD's heat feeler pushes the WRD's slide piston against a spring loaded pin(to return the slide valve when cold) which pushes the lever down(against the barometric compensator pressure). How much, etc, the lever moves versus the temp change is dependent upon the geometry of that stuff - plus any shims, washers, etc. added to the mix. Ideally, you want a direct proportional relation between the heat feeler movement and reduction of fuel flow. Or, at -20 C and max additional fuel, meaning a little forward rack movement. And at 60 C(or so) no additional fuel flow compensation(rack movement back to zero). The trick is to get this all working right with the air flow thru the valve.