Eric,
Thanks again!
The bent piece of line connected to the fitting on the pump - this is exactly what I did to measure fuel delivery to eliminate the fuel line being clogged! Happy we figured out the right way to do it!
I have the measurements noted to know what the delivery should be. It was 0.85ml on suspected cylinder per 15 sec cranking and 1.15 on others.
The three questions I would have are:
1. If I have the square plate of the pump unscrewed (to see the plunger units) while cranking - I guess I would have a flood of oil coming out - true or false? If true, it is probably about unscrewing the plate, moving unit, screwing it back, cranking to measure.
2. If I want to increase fuel - do I push the left side of the unit in or the right side? In other words: do I turn it clockwise to increase (looking from above) or CCW? This is to improve my chances by 50% to save one iteration - I do not think I will be able to see how the helix detent is cut in the plunger to determine the direction. From the rack movement - it should be CCW, I guess
.
3. Finally, just to make sure I mean the same things: I undo the screw on the element from the picture called "gear" and I turn the "gear/plunger" - is this correct? I think this "clamp" with a screw is a separate element, connecting with rack. I am attaching a scetch with what I think is a plunger unit similar to ours. I undo the screw 11 in clamp 10 and turn 9 with the bottom of 13. Is it correct?
I know I will never get it perfect this way.
Yes, it was a Bosch service - almost three years ago... warranty is gone. I have already called them, they said they would be happy to help and say sorry if they did not do it right. So it is not about the money, it is about lots of work and time. Therefore I am tempted to try to do it roughly now and send the pump in the winter.
What is even more important: can you imagine my level of satisfaction if I manage to improve the fuel delivery?