Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
mercruiser (chevery) 350. Compressions test showed 1 cylinder had 0. All
others were ok. Engine backfires and sputters. Doesn't seem to be leaking much oil if any at all. here's what I tried: -- Pulled the valve cover. Valve is moving up and down. cranked the motor until the valves were closed, blew compressed air in spark plug hole, no air came out the exhaust or intake. yanked the head off, no hole in cylinder (that I can see), head gasket look ok from what I could tell Any suggestions? |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"t" wrote in
: mercruiser (chevery) 350. Compressions test showed 1 cylinder had 0. All others were ok. Engine backfires and sputters. Doesn't seem to be leaking much oil if any at all. here's what I tried: -- Pulled the valve cover. Valve is moving up and down. cranked the motor until the valves were closed, blew compressed air in spark plug hole, no air came out the exhaust or intake. yanked the head off, no hole in cylinder (that I can see), head gasket look ok from what I could tell Any suggestions? This is *really* inlikely, but since it happened to me once, I'll tell you. Check to make sure that the piston is actually moving. I had a piston split in half once. The top stayed up, the skirt stayed on the wrist pin. Until I cranked with the head off, I could not figure our what happened. You could have broken a rod. Depending on where it broke, that could act as you describe... On the happier side, it could be a broken ring. You'd get almost 0 compression on some designs... Steve |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
First, I hope you were correct in your original test resulting in "zero"comp
in one cyl. If you don't see anything unusual, looking at the top of the "bad" cyl, compared to the others, look closely at the valves at the seat area. You could have some burned pitted area there. You will need a valve spring compressor which you can buy for $20-30 bucks at the local ap store or possibly rent. When you "blew comp. air in spark plug hole", did you seal the air source (with a rubber or threaded fitting to the hole where you had a "sealed" system and heard no air leaking, at 100-150psi? Or, did you just blow air into the hole and hold your hand over the exhaust/intake? I hate to say it but if you can't see anything "unusual" with the valve/seat, or the gasket or the top of the piston, or, some marking/scoring on the cyl wall w/piston at bottom, you may have mis-read the gauge or not seated it properly on that cyl. I think a week spring/sticking valve was already covered and you need to remove it to check (along with the seat). I would say there's one other possibility but it would have to affect all cylinders. That is a slipped chain on the camshaft, which would change the valve timing, possibly resulting in the two conditions you mentioned--backfiring and zero compression--but would affect all cylinders equally. LD "t" wrote in message .. . mercruiser (chevery) 350. Compressions test showed 1 cylinder had 0. All others were ok. Engine backfires and sputters. Doesn't seem to be leaking much oil if any at all. here's what I tried: -- Pulled the valve cover. Valve is moving up and down. cranked the motor until the valves were closed, blew compressed air in spark plug hole, no air came out the exhaust or intake. yanked the head off, no hole in cylinder (that I can see), head gasket look ok from what I could tell Any suggestions? |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
LD wrote:
First, I hope you were correct in your original test resulting in "zero"comp in one cyl. If you don't see anything unusual, looking at the top of the "bad" cyl, compared to the others, look closely at the valves at the seat area. You could have some burned pitted area there. You will need a valve spring compressor which you can buy for $20-30 bucks at the local ap store or possibly rent. When you "blew comp. air in spark plug hole", did you seal the air source (with a rubber or threaded fitting to the hole where you had a "sealed" system and heard no air leaking, at 100-150psi? Or, did you just blow air into the hole and hold your hand over the exhaust/intake? I hate to say it but if you can't see anything "unusual" with the valve/seat, or the gasket or the top of the piston, or, some marking/scoring on the cyl wall w/piston at bottom, you may have mis-read the gauge or not seated it properly on that cyl. I think a week spring/sticking valve was already covered and you need to remove it to check (along with the seat). I would say there's one other possibility but it would have to affect all cylinders. That is a slipped chain on the camshaft, which would change the valve timing, possibly resulting in the two conditions you mentioned--backfiring and zero compression--but would affect all cylinders equally. LD "t" wrote in message .. . mercruiser (chevery) 350. Compressions test showed 1 cylinder had 0. All others were ok. Engine backfires and sputters. Doesn't seem to be leaking much oil if any at all. here's what I tried: -- Pulled the valve cover. Valve is moving up and down. cranked the motor until the valves were closed, blew compressed air in spark plug hole, no air came out the exhaust or intake. yanked the head off, no hole in cylinder (that I can see), head gasket look ok from what I could tell Any suggestions? Take the plug out stand a rod in the plug hole if it moves up and down then you should know what your problem is. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Volvo Penta Engine Problems | Cruising | |||
Continuos Duty Bilge Blowers | General | |||
Emergency diesel shutdown | General | |||
safe to run generator without engine room fans running? | Cruising | |||
Help, Evinrude Fleetwin engine problems | General |