I've been busy changing the trigger sensors on the engine, and adding additional sensors to monitor engine vitals.
For the trigger sensors, I'm discarding the NA style one on the back of the exhaust cam and using a crank position sensor on the front of the crank plus a syncronisation sensor on the front of the cam. This should help to improve driveability at low engine speed for two reasons: Firstly I was getting some unstable engine speed reading and ignition timing scatter, which may have been caused by vibration in the timing belt, and secondly I will now be able to run sequential injection and therefore set accurate injection timing.
I'm using OE NB sensors.

I was going to use the NB trigger wheel on the crank, until I realised that the four teeth are not quite evenly spaced! An internet search for trigger wheels revealed that some US market Mazda Protegés used a 36-1 trigger wheel which is otherwise a direct replacement. Very handy! Part number is ZM01-11-408.

I have also added sensors for the engine vitals: oil pressure and temperature, and fuel pressure. These will all be monitored and logged by the engine ECU, which will activate driver alert lights as appropriate.
The oil pressure sensor is in the usual place in the block, and the temperature sensor is in the oil cooler adaptor between the oil filter and the block (on the side which sees oil before it goes through the cooler). The fuel pressure sensor is in a fitting I welded directly into the end of the fuel rail.

In that last photo you can also see that I have re-terminated the car's wiring harness which goes to the engine, using Deutsch DT series connectors.
I also made a completely new engine harness.

While it was all apart I had the injectors tested and ultrasonically cleaned. As it turned out the spray patterns and flows were fairly good anyway, but now there is one less unknown to deal with when I retune the engine.
And here it all is back together, with an NB throttle body and the correct throttle cable.

Next job is to terminate the wiring inside the car for the ECU. In addition to these wires in the OE harness there are another 14 wires from the new sensors on the engine plus driver alert lights in the dashboard, so I am going to get rid of the existing patch loom between the OE harness and the ECU, and re-terminate it all with a new ECU connector…
