Why do you keep repeating that you have fuel pressure if you haven't measured fuel pressure?
You have
fuel. You don't know how pressurized it is. This could be a failing fuel pump. Might be worth looking at.
It doesn't matter whether the fuel lines are hooked up correctly on the engine if they're not hooked up correctly on the car -- the end result is still the same.
If you're talking about the order the pipes appear in the engine bay, I believe you're right -- the top one is fuel return, the middle one is evaporated fumes, and the bottom one is fuel supply. You can verify it's working right by measuring fuel pressure.
I use a cheap tire pressure gauge to measure my fuel pressure. I believe it was this one:
http://www.idealtruevalue.com/servlet/the-32242/Detail
It turned out that the tire chuck could be unthreaded and underneath was a male 1/8" NPT thread. So I threaded it into a 1/8" pipe tee (with Teflon tape) and put 5/16" hose barbs on the other ends with maybe 8 inches of 5/16" fuel injection hose clamped onto on each. That whole assembly then replaced the hose going from the filter to the pipe on the intake manifold (there is no test fitting, like you say).
It was neat; I felt a little like McGuyver assembling this all in the aisle at Advance Auto Parts. It was pretty cheap, too -- way cheaper than a proper fuel injection tester. I know a tire pressure gauge probably isn't rated to handle gasoline, but it seems to me that all the parts exposed to fuel are made of brass (the body) or copper (the Bourdon tube), which ought to be okay. Certainly works for me. I keep a fire extinguisher handy at all times, of course.
After the priming pulse (when the ECU runs the pump for a few seconds after you turn the ignition switch on but don't start the engine), you should measure about 36 psi. If the engine is able to maintain idle speed for even a second or two, you should see fuel pressure drop to the mid-to-low 20s during that time.
If your compression numbers are good, it probably isn't the timing belt. Right? Or do you think your cams are off by a full crankshaft revolution, messing up the sequential fuel injection? I don't think that would keep the engine from running.
"Just reading vrg3's convoluted, information-packed posts made me feel better all over again." -- subyluvr2212