fitterski
Gold Member
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2016
- Messages
- 377
- Location
- Nouvelle, QC
- Tractor
- 1987 Cat-426, 1991 Deutz-Dx-6.05, 2019 Husqvarna 2xHP
On a Cummins 5.9 12-valve currently in the shop I will have to take a close look inside the injectin pump as it is the last one in a long line of suspects for failure to accelarate. There is another engine just like it on youtube where you can see THAT operator also trying to coax the rpm's up with only a litle more success. These engines are usually started automatically and almost immediately drive to full power, I SUSPECT that their timing is OFF the typical automotive application for example. My use for it will be more like automotive or tractor (actually a snow blower, another thread).
Cummins firepump - YouTube
I've redone the injectors, inside everything is like new (supposedly 1300 hours and consistent with that #). The pump is a Lucas CAV
It is turned by a 73 tooth gear @ half crank speed. There are timing LETTERS in the view-window and a ref line. According to the plate the letter B should be at the timing line when the pump is installed with #1 cyl at TDC. The gear is keyed so it can only be installed one way but it may be turned together with the pump innards beforehand to change timing. Normally the inside drum is locked by a screw prior to removal at TDC and unlocked after reinstallation. So far so good.
The thing is that I like to understand things before I touch them. I have no idea what the other timing letters stand for or what the actual timing would be at the prescribed "Letter B". On the automotive 5.9 typical timing is 11 degrees before TDC, which would approximate about 5.5 degrees on the pump gear. If I turn the spool from the letter B to A it eats up 9 teeth, far too many degrees to be an 'an adjustment' thing, and backing just 5.5 degrees to take a wild guess at the actual injection point there is no mark to be found. I hate Cummins for not being much, *MUCH* more explicit in the manual! Maybe the letters are used for different engines with different numbers of cylinders.
At LEAST igf they had placarded timing as "The Letter B = 12 degrees" or something then I would have a point of reference. I want to know what I'm getting into before I open the pump up.
Any pump experts around with a few words of wisdom? TIA
Oh yeah, I can't delete the hi-res image to save on upload overhead, how do you do that? What's the use of a thumbnail as opposed to an inline image?
Cummins firepump - YouTube
I've redone the injectors, inside everything is like new (supposedly 1300 hours and consistent with that #). The pump is a Lucas CAV

It is turned by a 73 tooth gear @ half crank speed. There are timing LETTERS in the view-window and a ref line. According to the plate the letter B should be at the timing line when the pump is installed with #1 cyl at TDC. The gear is keyed so it can only be installed one way but it may be turned together with the pump innards beforehand to change timing. Normally the inside drum is locked by a screw prior to removal at TDC and unlocked after reinstallation. So far so good.
The thing is that I like to understand things before I touch them. I have no idea what the other timing letters stand for or what the actual timing would be at the prescribed "Letter B". On the automotive 5.9 typical timing is 11 degrees before TDC, which would approximate about 5.5 degrees on the pump gear. If I turn the spool from the letter B to A it eats up 9 teeth, far too many degrees to be an 'an adjustment' thing, and backing just 5.5 degrees to take a wild guess at the actual injection point there is no mark to be found. I hate Cummins for not being much, *MUCH* more explicit in the manual! Maybe the letters are used for different engines with different numbers of cylinders.
At LEAST igf they had placarded timing as "The Letter B = 12 degrees" or something then I would have a point of reference. I want to know what I'm getting into before I open the pump up.
Any pump experts around with a few words of wisdom? TIA
Oh yeah, I can't delete the hi-res image to save on upload overhead, how do you do that? What's the use of a thumbnail as opposed to an inline image?