You know you're starting with a 90ish cc injector right?
The reason for nozzles in other applications, P7100 for instance, and the reason for nozzles in an HEUI ford aren't 100% the same.
The Ppump, can outflow the nozzle. In that, the pump will push more fuel than the nozzle has time to inject, before all it's doing is chasing the piston down the stroke. So, a nozzle in a Ppumped truck, or CP3'd, is simply a valve regulating how much fuel goes by in how much time.
Now, in a HEUI truck, that part is the same. Nozzle simply allows more fuel per time.
However, HEUI injectors take the place of the Ppump in the dodge. Your injector regulates how much fuel there is to inject. The injector is fed by a fuel rail in the head, and each time it fires it retracts the Intensifier Piston+Plunger, and simply refills off the fuel "res" in the head.
To get more fuel out of them, you tear the injector down, machine away a portion of the IP, and balance them on reassembly. (leaving quite a bit out, you can swap from Acode 16/6mm IP/plunger/barrels to Bcode 17/7mm for instance, that's the jist of it though.)
So, if you have an injector with a stroked Intensifier Piston already, and have more fuel to inject that you have time to inject, inside that crank rotation window when injecting fuel equals power, you need a larger nozzle.
Now, in ford speak, a 200% (more flow than stock) nozzle is an excellent middle of the road nozzle, provided you have a decent amount of fuel in the injectors.
If, you're staying sub 200cc's though, a 100% works quite nicely. And you'll empty the entire injector in the sub 2.5ms range.
Which not only optimizes injection per time in crank rotation, but it leaves plenty of time for IP retraction and fuel refill before that injector is up to fire again.
All that said, if you're not opening the injectors up, or the shop isn't, and adding volume to the injection... Then a nozzle won't do much for you. As you can already empty in a good window.
Your truck might run a little crisper than it did, and allow a tuner to take a little better advantage out of adjusting timing, but your end power result won't be much different, if at all.
So, Swamps is a sponsor here I believe... I'll plug them, but there are several good injector builders...
I'd recommend something like this, if you're only looking for a modest power bump.
150/146/A Single-Shot Injectors, Tow (Mild Street) - Swamps Diesel Performance
If you'd like to get up to mid 4's...
200/30% Injectors (Hot Street) - Swamps Diesel Performance