Which cylinders run the leanest
#21
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You think the dealer wouldn't warranty their own work? They fixed the engine and said it would be OK. If it died a short time later I'd be holding them to their statement.
#22
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Originally posted by 12SecZ
If I had two I would put them in the collectors on both sides to measure the whole banks, that would be very accurate and a sweet setup. I only have one and it is on the driver side in the RT Cat pipe just after the header but before the CAT right where they meet sort of and has proven to be very accurate. When I had my leak down test on my blown engine the good cylinders were exactly 185 not more or less.
If I had two I would put them in the collectors on both sides to measure the whole banks, that would be very accurate and a sweet setup. I only have one and it is on the driver side in the RT Cat pipe just after the header but before the CAT right where they meet sort of and has proven to be very accurate. When I had my leak down test on my blown engine the good cylinders were exactly 185 not more or less.
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Originally posted by x350Zx
Well, I initially had the car towed to the dealership after hydrolocking my engine in a rainstorm. They proceeded to get the water out of the cylinders. Afterwards they performed a compression test and the numbers I posted above are what they found. They said the numbers were okay, but I still think the water did some damage that the dealer did not notice. After all, they didn't even open up the darn block. Everyone I've talked to said my compression shouldn't vary that much. Also I've read about a bmw being hydrolocked, dealer diagnosing it as okay, then 20K miles later the engine was gone. It happened to be a piston a millimeter or two off spec. Oh well.
Well, I initially had the car towed to the dealership after hydrolocking my engine in a rainstorm. They proceeded to get the water out of the cylinders. Afterwards they performed a compression test and the numbers I posted above are what they found. They said the numbers were okay, but I still think the water did some damage that the dealer did not notice. After all, they didn't even open up the darn block. Everyone I've talked to said my compression shouldn't vary that much. Also I've read about a bmw being hydrolocked, dealer diagnosing it as okay, then 20K miles later the engine was gone. It happened to be a piston a millimeter or two off spec. Oh well.
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Originally posted by x350Zx
what do you mean by bad valve job? bad valve job from the factory or?
what do you mean by bad valve job? bad valve job from the factory or?
#26
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Originally posted by g356gear
Hydrolocking is way BAD !!! Water does not compress like air. Chances are if you hydrolocked the motor then you may have done some rod damage (bent). This slight bend in the rod would drop the compression in the bad cylinders because it would no longer reach max stroke at the top of the cylinder. Possibly you had a really good motor with 200 across the board before the hydrolock incident.
Hydrolocking is way BAD !!! Water does not compress like air. Chances are if you hydrolocked the motor then you may have done some rod damage (bent). This slight bend in the rod would drop the compression in the bad cylinders because it would no longer reach max stroke at the top of the cylinder. Possibly you had a really good motor with 200 across the board before the hydrolock incident.
hey btw this is kind of OT but how do you like those mines test pipes?
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