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My rebuild runs around 105psi and the non-rebuild
tops out around 95-98. Again, This ABSOLUTELY does vary depending on lots of factors than Im aware of such as, hot/cold, throttle open or not, day of the week, time of day, etc. really. I think this is why my book is so vauge on the subject. I use it to look for trends and to compare cylinders more than anything else. 70-80 does sound too low and 10psi is too large of a range I think. Your lower cylinders will read a bit lower. db "Jim and Becky" wrote in message ... OK I agree, but if all six cylinders have 70-80 psi isn't there a problem? I'm thinking the 120-140 psi range is what I'm looking for based of something I read long ago. Hence my latest question. "Mark" Boatbasin@optonline(remove this).net wrote in message ... "Jim and Becky" wrote in message ... Anyone know what psi reading I should expect on these 1988 200's? On a new engine? An engine that I probably don't want? You should not be concentrating on absolute compression reading, The compression reading will depend on humidity, air pressure, cranking speed (battery charge) and a host of other factors. You should be concentrating on the difference between the cylinders, a range within 5 psi is what you ared looking for. |
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