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Re: Compression w/i 10% variance (but < 175 lbs)

To: Dave Leland <starofindy@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Compression w/i 10% variance (but < 175 lbs)
From: Dave & M <rusd@velocitus.net>
Date: Mon, 02 Jan 2006 12:24:35 -0700
Hi Dave,

The readings are a bit low. Low readings could be caused by higher
altitude, the manual would be based on sea level. Air density &
resultant compression readings would drop about 3.4% for each 1,000 feet
elevation above sea level. In your case, about 6 psi/1,000 ft.
Compression gages could have an equal or greater amount of error.

Since the readings are uniform, I doubt if anything is ready to
immediately fail. Worn engines usually don't fail suddenly, the just get
gradually worse until low power output & hard starting become annoying.

I suspect that the low readings combined with somewhat low oil pressure
indicate "some" engine wear. As long as the  engine starts & runs ok, I
would wait for it to get worse before rebuilding the engine. At least
wait for a convenient time & budget to rebuild it. You may be surprised
at how much better it runs with a rebuild. If that time is now, go ahead
& rebuild it. Otherwise, it will probably go another 10,000 miles before
getting really bad.

Regards,
Dave Russell



Dave Leland wrote:
 > Does anyone have any thoughts on my compression readings below?   My
 > Haynes manual says to expect about 175 lbs and I'm lower (but
 > consistently lower).
 >
 > How long can I wait for a rebuild is my main concern.
 >
 > #1-  147 lbs #2-  150 lbs #3-  149 lbs #4-  151 lbs #5-  148 lbs #6-
 > 150 lbs
 >
 > The car is a BJ7 with probably 80k miles and oil pressure is 30-35lbs
 >  when warmed up at cruising speed. Thanks for your thoughts.
 >
 > Dave Leland Nashville, TN




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