I think I understand how the pump flows, but the relative amounts of flow are beyond my understanding because they are dependent on the dimensions and pressures.
As I understand it, flow enters from the tank into the pump and fills the filter area A due to gravity when the pump is off and dry. With time, the pump will self prime with cavities B and C also filling up with fuel due to internal leakage. When it is started, the VANE in cavity B will prime the pump from cavity A if not already primed and will pump fuel from cavity A through cavity B to cavity C at a higher pressure.
So long as the pump is running, fuel flows from the outlet to the engine compartment fuel filter and to the injection pump to start and run the engine.
Without the cavity D to cavity A O-ring seal:
While the pump is running, the fuel pressure is highest in cavity C and lowest in cavity A. Without the O-ring seal between cavity D and cavity A, fuel can flow from the high pressure volume of cavity C through the gap created by the missing O-ring and into cavity A, resulting in some reduction of fuel flow to the engine. Because there is no O-ring seal around the motor/pump shaft between cavity C and cavity D, there is some small amount of “leakage” fuel flow from cavity C into cavity D due to the lower pressure in cavity D caused by the suction of the VANE through cavity A. How much fuel flow into the motor cavity D is available to cool the motor is questionable.
With the cavity D to cavity A O-ring seal:
If as in the second sketch, the O-ring is positioned between cavity D and cavity A, then there is no fuel flow from cavity C to cavity A. Any fuel flow that is sucked into cavity A from cavity C must come through cavity D and must pass from cavity C to cavity D via fuel flow leakage around the shaft between cavity C and cavity D.
The presence of the O-ring between cavity D and cavity A should have two effects.
1) it results in a slightly higher fuel flow to the engine because of the reduction of leakage from cavity C directly to cavity A, and
2) the fuel flow that is pulled from cavity C through cavity D and into cavity A serves to cool the motor. The cavity C to cavity A leakage without the O-ring serves no obvious (to me) purpose other than possibly to cause faster pump-off initial gravity priming.
If this analysis is reasonably correct, then, had I done it before reassembly, I would have installed the small O-ring between cavity D and cavity A.
I am satisfied that the pump performs adequately without the O-ring, since it has not been there for approximately 50 years. Only five years of storage prompted me to clean the pump and replace the O-rings, with the exception of the cavity D to cavity A O-ring.
My pump when primed and tested after disassembly, varnish removal and seal replacement, primed almost instantly with diesel fuel and flowed one liter per 11 seconds. The target is one liter per 15 seconds or less.
These results were without the O-ring seal.
Tom Kizer