The term "Flooding a diesel" gives kind of the wrong mental picture. In order for a diesel engine to start it needs to raise the temperature of the compression chamber to the flash point of diesel fuel in the air/fuel charge that is there.
The desired way to do that is with the high compression ratio of the engine. Many things can influence "if and how" that happens.
1. Cranking speed. Slow cranking speed doesn't squeeze the air molecules together enough to heat them up. Low batteries, cold oil, loose clearances in a worn engine, are a few factors.
2. Air / Fuel mix. If more fuel is introduced into the mix, the "wetter" mixture takes a higher temperature to reach the flash point of the fuel. Ideal Stochiometric Ratio for starting is pretty lean when compared to gasoline engines.
3. Use of Ether [AKA death gas for diesels] simply introduces a material that has a lower flash point temperature than cold diesel droplets which by it's ignition, raises the ambient temp of the combustion chamber so that the next charge of diesel droplet mist will be ignited. Hot air from a hair dryer or heat gun will have the same effect, as does engine preheat.
4. Fast idle is intended to just bump up the idle speed so you don't have to set with your foot on the throttle to "warm up the engine" as a convenience item. By rotating faster [slightly] the compression raises combustion temp of the compressed air which fires off the fuel.. etc etc etc..
So, pumping more raw fuel into the engine on startup cranking does not raise your chances of starting.. presuming fuel is being supplied as designed. [no air leaks and a tight fuel system, properly working injection pump and nozzles].