I have not needed to do it on mine as yet. It has done 163k and starts fine (or would do when I charge up my battery).
I have been meticulous about oil changes so I guess the chain has not worn too much.
The method is trial and error. First of all mark the position of the FIP relative to the surrounding casting with a felt tip pen. This gives a starting point.
Then with the engine off, slacken the bolts in the FIP and rotate the FIP towards the engine. From the front of the car this would be anticlockwise.
Try 2mm to start with. Bolt the FIP up tight and try starting it. Then try 4mm and see if it is any better.
As I said, I have not needed to do it but I know what to do.
There are some practical issues like the best way to force the FIP to move when the fuel injection pipes are solidly bolted to it. I think Kapila has done it so he may chip in. I think most people have reported that 4mm works best for them but do it in 2mm steps.
It can also be done live with the engine running using a nanocom or a faultmate. Same method to rotate the FIP but you can see the engine fuel injection timing live on the screen.
2000 Range Rover 2.5 DSE HP24 auto, uprated torque converter - JFearn chip, larger intercooler, removable winch, stainless exhaust, alloy radiator, Gen III's, Terrafirma +2" shocks, GG AT2/3's.
Full Fat Faultmate able to do all models.
- ex 1996 Discovery 2.5 300Tdi diesel auto
- ex-1982 Classic 3.86 Perkins diesel manual