DrEntropy said:
Exhaust valve indeed! OUCH!
So are you now "headless" Kev?
Hey Doc! How about an education for us?
1 We had Kevin do a compression test and he found
his cylinder No. 3 at 30 psi.
2. many suggestion of head gasket, manifold gasket,
burnt valves, bad valve guides, you name it.
3. I suggested Kevin do a simple exhast valve test.
Cut a piece of newspaper square 6" X 6" or so and
hold it against the exhaust pipe. If the paper is
continuously pushed away, the exhaust valves are
functioning properly.
If the paper gets sucked toward the pipe and then pushed
away, suck toward, push ,etc. That indicates a problematic exhaust valve.
Kevin's paper test indicated no exhaust valve problem.
No valves not working properly.
Kevins vacuum testing ruled out head gasket, bad timing,
burnt valve, bad manifold or carb gasket, loose valve guides,
worn rings, bad plug gaps or way out carb adjustment.
Kevin's vacuum testing indicated a sticking or leaky valve.
Obviously the vacuum test picked up the chunk missing from
No.3 exhaust valve. Why did the paper test on the exhaust
pipe NOT suck back with that big a hole in exhaust valve?
A compression and a vacuum gauge are excellent diagnostic tools.
The tests narrowed the problem to a valve on No.3
Why did the paper test fail with such a large chunk missing
from the valve? That's why I called the intake valve as the culprit.
Thanks for educating us beginners at engine diagnostics.
best regards,
dale (Tinster).
edit: fumble fingers