This is my first Diesel powered pickup. I know about older cars with Carbs and Distributers. What I was tought was to add 2 degrees of ignition timing for every 1000 gain in Elevation.
So if a car was spek'd for say 0TDC @ sea level we would run the timing up to 6BTDC @my 3000ft elevation to get performance back.
Are you saying that with a diesel you retard the injection timing as you go up in elevation?
EEK SCREECH NOOO

that is completely bass akwards ! As you go UP in elevation, you INCREASE the advance in injection timing and REDUCE the injected amount of fuel to lean out the mix to compensate for the reduced amount of air. You begin making adjustments at around 3800 ft and in intervals therof so if the vehicle is going to be spending most of its time around 3800 you set for that, if 7600 ft you set for that, if you live in the bolivian high country up around 11-12000 ft, you have all kinds of fun trying to adjust things to make it run ( I know some fellas with some European diesels who live there that have fun keeping engines happy at that altitude ) Why the stanadyne pumps didnt come with automatic altitude compensators on them I have no idea. Bosch started putting them on car diesels in the early 80s to where they had a little altitude sensor that would automatically increase the injection timing and reduce the injected fuel amount when you got above 3800 ft, and if you normally started at a higher altitude you could get an anaeroid ( seperate from the anaroid on the pump, this one would be mounted externally ) that sensed higher altitude points for it to change over atAre you certain that, !) you are using teh correct spot on the timing tab to time from. 2) that your harmonic balancer has not separated from the rubber elastomer isolation dampener strip and has rotated ( fairly common ) ..3) you are attached to the correct injection line either #1 or 4 1 is the first one on the left if facing the engine from the front and four is the second back on the right, because quite frankly, it should barely be running at 5 deg on the new fuel.
The only thing I could think that might make it run worse when properly timed is someone may have cranked the fuel screw all teh way up in an attempt to compensate for the lousy timing and them with that much excess fuel , with it set properly it would be so overfueled it would run like hell or possibly the cold advance solenoid isw stucking on