Zoidsfan77
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- Columbus, Ohio
I was under the impression that turning the screw was to be avoided, and the button should be replaced if you wish to increase fuel pressure. I could be mistaken though.My experience with the NHC-250 is somewhat different. I think he is a little low on the power spectrum compared to my truck. I have an M923A0 that I put 14R20's on. I can get to 60 in about 30 seconds and have pulled hills at 55 mph with 26,000 pounds in tow. I had modified the pump by drilling out the tamper proof ball in the throttle shaft and unseating the fuel screw by about 3/4 of a turn. When the pump puked the front seals out and filled the crankcase with diesel, I had it rebuilt. The shop that did the work flowbenched it and turned it up even more. I asked if my attempt to turn it up resulted in the failure and they claimed it wasn't even turned up to factory Cummins specs. One thing they noted was that the "emergency shutoff" valve did not stop at center when pushed all the way forward. Could just be the one on my truck but likely many more of them. Before I reinstalled the pump, I inserted a drill bit backwards and added a mark with a hacksaw blade so that I could index where I need to set the "emergency shutoff" to on the top of the pump to "true center" of the slot in the shutoff. They also upped the fuel rate 10% and I certainly noticed the difference in performance. The heavy towing comparison was done before the pump work. For what it's worth, having the pump remanufactured locally only cost $350 or $375, can't remember exactly but that's in the ball park.
Something I had wondered is how far is safe when turning up these engines. I know it depends on how you drive it and what you use it for.
Thanks for sharing your experience.