In the main, idle advance is usually around 15 degrees.
Injection end angle on a closed valve is usually better for emissions as the fuel sits on the back of a hot valve and has a chance to vaporize. The quality of the injector spray pattern is also important.
Liquid fuel does not burn, and will end up as hydrocarbons in the exhaust (much the same reason that you need to inject more fuel on a cold engine to maintain the same lambda target, that extra fuel is going out the exhaust or onto the inlet port or cylinder walls). Injecting fuel on an open valve with a poor injector spray pattern will see higher HC content in the exhaust.
There does seem to be an equal argument for injecting on open or closed vlave, but most say inject on a closed valve for good emissions. A 4 gas analyser is the tool of choice to best see how injection angle affect emissions.
You can tune injection end angle by swinging the angle until the richest Lambda is experienced for the same injector pulse width. I'm not sure if this is the result of the extra fuel no longer leaving in the exhaust as HC, or whether is the result of a lower fuel film on the inlet port.
I've just bought a 4 gas analyser for this very reason
Vems end angle is degrees BTDC. Recommended is 210 -370 degrees
http://www.vems.hu/wiki/index.php?page=GenBoard%2FManual%2FConfig%2FInjectorTiming I'm not sure which BTDC this relates to, the compression stroke or the exhaust strokeFound the answer here
http://www.vems.hu/wiki/index.php?page=PortInjected%2FSequentialInjection It's BTDC on the compression stroke, so the ignition and injection are using the same reference point (Makes sense)