5 and 6 cylinder motors may have a different sprocket on the fuel pump, so it is TBD whether they have a notch in the pulley or not.
The cam pulleys do have a notch, and for reasons that I do not fully understand as even from the factory (and I have been the first tech to touch the timing belt on many an engine now) the cam pulley notches are not centered all the time. Sometimes they are, mostly they aren't. But the cams are not keyed and cannot be keyed, so there is that to consider. The fuel pump shaft IS keyed.
For those trying to wrap their head around how a 3-lobed pump can match up with a 4-cylinder engine, it is math on the size of the pulley. I'd imagine that the different engines with more cylinders have different size pulleys on the fuel pump, and that contributes to properly matching them up with a lobe for each main injection event too.
Here is how the math works on the 2.8 4-cylinder:
Starting from 90 ATDC on #1, pins capable of inserting, fuel pump lined up with lets say lobe #1. rotate 90 degrees, cylinder 3 fires with lobe #2 rotate 180 degrees, cylinder 4 fires with lobe #3 Rotate 270 degrees, cylinder 2 fires with lobe #1 rotate 360 degrees, cylinder 1 fires with lobe #2 rotate 90 #2, cyl 3 fires with lobe #3 rotate 180 #2, cyl 4 fires with lobe #1 rotate 270 #2, cyl 2 fires with lobe #2 rotate 360 #2, cyl 1 fires with lobe #3 - PINS INSERT, fuel pump 240 degrees out from mark. Rotate 90 #3, cyl 3 with lobe #1 rotate 180 #3, cyl 4 with lobe #2 rotate 270 #3, cyl 2 with lobe #3 rotate 360 #3, cyl 1 with lobe #1... Fuel pump is now exactly 180 out from starting point, pins do not insert. Rotate 90 #4, cyl 3 with lobe #2 rotate 180 #4, cyl 4 with lobe #3 rotate 270 #4, cyl 2 with lobe #1 rotate 360 #4, cyl 1 with lobe #2 - Pins again insert, fuel pump 120 degrees out from mark. rotate 90 #5, cyl 3 with lobe #3 rotate 180 #5, cyl 4 with lobe #1 rotate 270 #5, cyl 2 with lobe #2 rotate 360 #5, cyl 1 with lobe #3 rotate 90 #6, cyl 3 with lobe #1 rotate 180 #6, cyl 4 with lobe #2 rotate 270 #6, cyl 2 with lobe #3 rotate 360 #6, cyl 1 with lobe #1... DING DING! Back at starting point, pins insert and pump lines up.
Hopefully this helps everyone visualize how the lobes can match with the firing order, and why I think it is important to have them match with the timing mark.
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