Rising Sun is your best option. Promise you, well worth the drivePootcrum wrote:
Regardless, this is now a mechanics job, I have not the means to fix this at home. Trustworthy Adelaide mechanics anyone? Preferably south?
Sven
Rising Sun is your best option. Promise you, well worth the drivePootcrum wrote:
Regardless, this is now a mechanics job, I have not the means to fix this at home. Trustworthy Adelaide mechanics anyone? Preferably south?
Glad to see why I put #1 check as a compression check.. always best to see what you're dealling with before spending too much moneyPootcrum wrote: cyl #1 160 psi
cyl #3 160 psi
cyl #4 175-180 psi
cyl #2 <50 psi!!!!
Clearly #2 cylinder is bad for some reason, stuck open valve, bad ring, bad gasket I don't know. I would have thought that if the gasket was bad, both cylinders 4 and 2 would show low compression, but is there any significance to the high compression in cyl 4? Could that be a cause rather than a symptom?
Yeh wish I had, but I didn't have the gauge to do the test and felt spending the $60 it would cost to get a gauge was better spent on simple things to rule them out. Since then I found a great compression kit at a local auto place for only $35. Oh well, hindsight is a bitch.RSR 555 wrote:Glad to see why I put #1 check as a compression check.. always best to see what you're dealling with before spending too much money
I would say that #3 is where it should be and that #1 & #3 are low due to a leak in betwen cyl but a 20psi drop overall is nothing to worry about. I'd just adjust # 2 valve clearance and carry on happy motoring
Good advice for an EA82 but doesn't really happen on the Brumby's EA81steptoe wrote:I also find dip stick tube and oil filler neck sources of leaks. On EA82 mfi it can be a cracked rear PCV hose