
At first I thought it was a mangled copper washer causing the problem, which I subsequently got out. When I removed the copper washer I noticed the injector was wet up to the threads, so obviously some of the diesel vapour was blowing by back up to there.
I replaced the washer, cleaned the carbon off the injector seat and nozzle, ran the engine and removed the injector to inspect it again. There was no more blow by the copper washer but the whole nozzle was coated in fuel. I noticed that after cleaning the injector, the engine ran well for a few seconds without pulses of smoke before going back to it's old tricks again. A couple of days later I went to get some fire seals and when I pulled the injector to fit a new fireseal (to stop the fuel blowing by the nozzle) I found the whole nozzle was coated in carbon.
I cleaned the nozzle and put the new fireseal in and now it seems to run slightly better (easier to "revive" with the throttle pedal when it starts hunting up and down the rev range) but it is still producing pulses of smoke and down on power.
Before I forget to mention, I have tried different injectors (the old Lucas units) and they seem to have the same problem, so it can't be the injectors that are at fault. I am running and have been running on veg for awhile, I have read on other forum topics about the piston rings becoming "sticky" with veg residue, but I have run diesel through every now and then and still had the same problem.