The manuals should be available on the Agilent site, along with a comprehensive series of maintenance training videos/files. If you haven't already, you need to confirm that the problem is the valve, and not the needle/seat assembly or a capillary line..
It's quite likely that you are going to dismantle the valve, so read and watch carefully before starting. All the necessary tools will have come with the instrument - try to find them, they make the task easier. It takes about 30 minutes to either repair blockages in the needle/seat or valve - but ensure you have spares before you start.
Before embarking on the disassembly, it is usually worth while to try and dissolve up any precipitated salts that may be the cause of the pressure. I've found one solution is to disconnect the lines between pump and injector, and pump and column, and put a longer, wider ID line in the pump side and a short line to waste on the column side.
Put as much as possible of the long line in a beaker of hot water and try to pump a highly aqueous ( 90+% ) mobile phase at the fastest rate your pressure will allow. If you suspect the blockage is caused by a sample component, you can try suitable solvents in place of an aqueous mobile phase.
If the salts dissolve, you'll get a dramatic pressure drop, if they don't, identify where you problem is using the manuals test regime, and start disassembly.
Don't try to reverse-pressurise any components - Murphy's law will demonstrate that other seals will also fail.
Please keep having fun,
Bruce Hamilton