Thanks jackwhoo, the pump shaft is to short to reach the cambelt gear, there is a 5ins spacer then a 4ins block before it gets to the cam belt i think it can be removed from the rear with out removing the belt, but i would like to see a video or conformation that it is posable
It may be worth trying to undo it and see if it will slide out as no timing points necessary on Common Rail pump. In the photo you can see there is no adjusting slots in the mounting points that secure it to housing. So if it slides out and for peace of mind nothing is moved on engine afterwards, you could mark it on removal. I suspect it will have a gear drive design from the older type pre Common Rail pumps as basically the same engine.
On the Siemens pump on a 2.0 litre Fiat Scudo (Peugeot engine RHR) I had there was a part number code sticker on the pump which, I don't know if the Bosch one will have as they usually rely on a long string of numbers.
Re my query on history of non starting, was the vehicle in normal running order when parked up, or did you acquire as a non runner?
Not sure about the valve you refer to, I believe there was a return filter on some Bosch pumps that would block and cause issues.
As I understand it the Bosch pumps use an electric primer pump in the tank which I prefer. The Siemens high pressure pump has a hand primer and uses a "suction" side of the high pressure pump which is a poor design in my eyes.
In some cases I have used a gravity feed fuel tank to locate a fault, such as air leaking into the fuel line via a poor connector, but this is more related to the Seimens design that uses vacuum and so encourages air to be drawn in. With the Bosch version using a low pressure pump in tank , then any leak would be fuel coming out so more obvious.
Re a rusted spring in a valve in fuel line allowing fuel to run back to low pressure pump, I think you will find if pressure reduced on low pressure side then the ECU would sense it and trigger the low pressure pump, much the same as when you first turn the ignition on and you here it build up line pressure.
The only thing along those lines that I can think of is a fault fuel pressure regulator on the high pressure pump it's self, which if faulty would allow fuel to join the injector leak off side of the system , returning fuel to the tank. When working correctly it is able to fine tune the exact pressure in the Common Rail that the ECU asks for.
I am sure you know this, but even a tiny leak from a poor union etc. on the Common Rail side of the high pressure pump is enough to prevent the engine from running as it requires roughly a minimum of 230Bar of pressure to activate the injectors.
This is why a good diagnostic tool giving live data when cranking the engine would show if reaching that minimum pressure or not is very useful.
