Your last statement in this post concerning idle...can you lower fuel pressure, and then decrease timing, in order to smooth out the idle? I don't know much about tuning, just taking a stab at what seems logical because of the amount of fuel that's going into the cylinder (more than a stock injector) at idle. Leave the table alone at whatever rpm it runs smooth at high idle though.
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Doesn't matter what size injector you run, it still takes roughly 8MM3 of fuel at idle to make a DURAMAX engine idle at 680RPM's. The larger injector injects the same amount of fuel in a shorter amount of time is all. The problem I see is the LB7 tables are mapped for VCO injectors where there is no delay between the injector opening to inject fuel, and fuel coming out of the nozzle. In a SAC injector nozzle this is not the case. Since you have one sealing surface, then a small pocket, and then the fuel goes out the nozzle orifices, you have a slight delay for that pocket to pressurize. So even though you have a larger injector, at small lower pressure pulsewidths it actually injects less fuel due to the pocket having to pressurize before injection takes place. At higher pressures it switches back the other way as the higher pressure pressurizes that pocket quicker allowing the larger orifices to let the fuel out quicker since the pocket pressurizes so much faster when the pressures turned up.
I'm actually using a pretty UNIQUE pulse table right now to say the least trying to get my idle and off idle transition tables back to stock. Stock fuel tables are very jumpy I've noticed from where the pressure ramps up and the injector begins injecting more fuel than a stock one VS where in the lower pressures it is actually injecting less. Mine was actually popping and missing just off idle with a stock fuel table in it.
As to reducing pressure, this increases the lower injected amount, reduces fuel atomization, and all around doesn't work well with bigger nozzles that tend to run dirtier to begin with. As to timing, due to the delay of that pocket pressurizing, I've found that you need to bump the timing up to account for the injection delay of SAC's VS VCO's, and since they inject the fuel in a narrower window in most areas, you have to also account for this in your timing. So I found that changing idle timing from -3.6 to -2, and bumping pilot up from 4-4.3 range up to 4.5-5 range reduced fuel useage at idle by almost 1MM3 of fuel by itself as well as smoothed out the raspiness I had at idle that I thought was too small of a pilot shot. Little by little I'm getting the tuning ironed out. So far my mid and upper ranges are good to go, just trying to get a handle on my idle and off idle areas where the SAC's go from flowing less to flowing more fuel is giving me some issues right now. So far I have it down to less haze than before on spool up, but the power increase is "IMPRESSIVE" to say the least.