cougar wrote:I found a Bosch article explaining that different washer thicknesses were used to make up for machining variations in the depth of the injector holes and tip lengths placing the tips in a more uniform position above the piston.
That's what I believe. Assuming the crankshaft's center-line is truly parallel to the block/head interface, the washers are to dial-in the injector/piston-bowl relationship relative to the injection event.
The notion of the washers effecting the injection event timing is off IMO. The injection event timing is relative the the crankshaft position . . . so many degrees BTDC, etc. I think that landmark is about the beginning of the event (or perhaps peak combustion pressure, dunno for sure). The washers help ensure the best nozzle position relative to the piston-bowl, during the injection event . .. start to finish. And that's where our thinning of the washers comes into play.
Our turning up the fuel volume effectively lengthens the injection event as the injector's opening and closing is based on a set spring (POP-pressure). Without changing anything other than turning up the fuel, I think there's an issue of the flame being out of the bowl upon the nozzle's entry and exit (perhaps more accurately, the fuel spray pattern). Thinning the washers sets the nozzle just that much deeper in the bowl thus putting more of the flame in the bowl.
Anyway, that's what the voices say.
