To further this topic, diesels nearly always run lean. Far lean, at idle, this engine injects 6 to 10 milligrams of diesel each combustion stroke. 379 cubic inches of air gets under 50 milligrams of diesel. That is 7000 milligrams of air, basically a 140:1 air to fuel ratio.
Full throttle is 50 milligrams per stroke or 400 milligrams to 7000 milligrams of air or an air to fuel ratio of 17.5 to 1. Still lean compared to a gasoline engine but the above numbers assume 100percent volumetric efficiency. It's under 70 percent at 3600 RPM.
Now how can this happen? The flame in a gasoline engine is homogeneous, burn rate is dependent on compression ratio, gasoline quality and combustion chamber shape/size.. The flame in a diesel is more like a blowtorch. It ignites shortly after injection starts, then progresses over the duration of injection window. In the indirect injection diesel, it progresses out of the chamber at higher throttle positions as it consumes all the oxygen in this chamber (30 to 40% of the total squish volume), eventually bearing a jet of flame directly on the piston.
So, what does this mean when you add a turbo to this engine? You have more air so you can add more fuel. A turbo without more fuel means no power increase. Most injection pumps have a bit more capacity built into the mechanism for calibration. This also has the benefit of bumping the timing a bit more advanced.