A 1977 360. The bores should've been honed regardless, those bores are 48 years old, I wouldn't be surprised if it didn't need to be bored.
I did back before first fire up, but I will check it again. Thanks for the suggestion!I would be making sure that #4 spark plug is firing cause that seems suspect to me.
Did you try running starter with valve covers off watching all the rocker arms?
Oh it stinks man...smelling the oil will help to see if theres any kind of gas there
Yea that was going to be the plan, but the clamp itself is pretty nasty. Cheap old Chinese one, going to redo it with a better one with a stud for the other connections going to it.Connection issue. Clean the cables, posts, if they're clamp style ..loosen scrape and reclamp them and test again.
No man, not at all...I mean, I have done some of the things suggested, but maybe not looking for or doing it the ways suggested. Someone suggested finding the leak source, possibly head gasket, so I am going to try cylinder 6 again but with water in the block and rad. Someone suggested compression test with oil, never did that, so going to do that...Someone suggested cap and rotor, going to try that too.So far every response to questions returns an answer of "I've already done that". Deja vu. lol
I think op will figure it out on his own the answer we all know.
What would have been a really good idea... is to have bore gauged the cylinders. The tapper and oor could be huge , like .007+
that was my first thought too dan, but then i noticed he reused the same piston/rings/rods so they're already matched/bedded to their respective bores.A 1977 360. The bores should've been honed regardless, those bores are 48 years old, I wouldn't be surprised if it didn't need to be bored.
A 1977 360. The bores should've been honed regardless, those bores are 48 years old, I wouldn't be surprised if it didn't need to be bored.
i meant to mention before
that was my first thought too dan, but then i noticed he reused the same piston/rings/rods so they're already matched/bedded to their respective bores.
neil.
Get back to us when you do all the things you can and then we can go from there, but make a list of everything setup and issue wise to further reduce the factors we don't know without being there like timing dizzy setup etc
Cylinder 4 had 2% leakdown though...You know cly 4 is missing. You know it has low compression. You even leak down tested it and it confirmed the compression test. Find where the air is going. My guess is thru a valve. Seen it often with speed master heads.
I was referring to the phasing of the rotor possibly being off from the wear on the brass inserts. Maybe a lighter wallet, but if there's a crack that I can't see, I don't mind ruling it out.The existing cap already has brass inserts. Make sure the spring leaf on the rotor contacts the carbon button in the cap. It has been making contact because there is some wear of the button, normal wear. You cam measure the resistance of the button. Under 1000 ohms is good; looks to be a performance cap because it is made of Rynite. Result of a new cap will be a lighter wallet...& nothing else.
I mean, maybe...not even 100% sure it's the rings yet, but that said, LS guys and even some G3 guys will regap rings, put em back in the same hole with no hone, and run them HARD. So it's definitely not uncommon. Maybe I need to have 10psi huffing through it to help them seal right back up lolI’m afraid u got a real life lesson on using used rings over. Life is too short to gamble on them. They will be worn to the position they were in. Then when u re install then they will be rotated from the original position Not honing it is not a smart move also. I can’t see anyone being so dam cheap as not to buy new rings and hone the cylinders. Can u elaborate on why u did this? Kim
Do you think grabbing an inexpensive smoke machine would help? Filling the carb with smoke and then cylinder to see where it's escaping?Regarding the phasing on the cap. If you have a vac advance and it is not hooked up, that could account for the arcing on the side of the terminals. The vacuum can when applied will sweep the rotor across the terminals lining up the rotor with the cap. Hope that makes sense.
Also when retesting the leak down. Try listening more carefully without background noise. Put your ear to the tailpipe and the carburetor and the crankcase. Check adjacent cylinder spark plug holes and the radiator. If still leaking and no source can be found try tapping the top of the valve to dislodge any carbon or foreign material that may be stuck in the seat. Try the oil in the cylinder last. 70% is a lot of leakage. If it is leaking that bad you should be able to source where it is coming from.
I wasn’t aware that anyone was installing used rings as I never have and never would. It just seems *** backwards to me. I’m like why go thru all that work and then have to do it over. You never by chance re installed the rings upside down did you?This is the plan. The last 2 evenings have been busy. Hoping to work on it tonight and tomorrow and have a clearer picture.
Cylinder 4 had 2% leakdown though...
I was referring to the phasing of the rotor possibly being off from the wear on the brass inserts. Maybe a lighter wallet, but if there's a crack that I can't see, I don't mind ruling it out.
I mean, maybe...not even 100% sure it's the rings yet, but that said, LS guys and even some G3 guys will regap rings, put em back in the same hole with no hone, and run them HARD. So it's definitely not uncommon. Maybe I need to have 10psi huffing through it to help them seal right back up lol
Live and learn...I'm not angry, it is what it is
Ah okay, I had no idea that could be the case regarding the Vacuum advance, and no, it was not hooked up, so that makes sense.Regarding the phasing on the cap. If you have a vac advance and it is not hooked up, that could account for the arcing on the side of the terminals. The vacuum can when applied will sweep the rotor across the terminals lining up the rotor with the cap. Hope that makes sense.
Also when retesting the leak down. Try listening more carefully without background noise. Put your ear to the tailpipe and the carburetor and the crankcase. Check adjacent cylinder spark plug holes and the radiator. If still leaking and no source can be found try tapping the top of the valve to dislodge any carbon or foreign material that may be stuck in the seat. Try the oil in the cylinder last. 70% is a lot of leakage. If it is leaking that bad you should be able to source where it is coming from.
Funny you mention that, I was actually thinking about doing that last night. If my current to do list of checks comes up short, im going to jump on amazon and see about that.Do you think grabbing an inexpensive smoke machine would help? Filling the carb with smoke and then cylinder to see where it's escaping?
I get it, but many wouldn't bat an eye to it if the engine is in good health originally. Rings are definitely installed correctly, I triple checked that, and judging by the fantastic leak down numbers on the other cylinders, I'm even more confident about that.I wasn’t aware that anyone was installing used rings as I never have and never would. It just seems *** backwards to me. I’m like why go thru all that work and then have to do it over. You never by chance re installed the rings upside down did you?
Maybe, I haven't ever tried that. I would put the smoke directly in the cylinder with both valves closed just like you would if you were doing a leak down test. But honestly I haven't ever had a cylinder leak at 70% that wasn't obvious where the leak was at. It will be interesting to see what the op finds when he gets to the bottom of this mystery.Do you think grabbing an inexpensive smoke machine would help? Filling the carb with smoke and then cylinder to see where it's escaping?
You're right, I don't have a lot of time these days...BUT I actually won't touch the car unless I know I can carve out the time I need as I don't want to rush anything. When I did the leakdown the first time, I was out there for a couple hours running all the cylinders twice, and cylinder 6 probably 5 or 6 times....longest leakdown testing ever lolSounds like you are like me. Not much time so sometimes you may rush. Any chance the excessive leak down test was the last of the session. If that happened to me I would go back to a good cylinder and repeat the test there to make sure my results were repeatable. I mean air could leak before it got in the cylinder, etc.
Try testing the plug wires and swapping those cylinders in question plugs to two other cylinders.
I've had bad olug wires cause problems. Wires that by every Visual Indicator looked fine. Definitely worth trying new set.
I have decided I'm going to try and fire it up again, moving some plug wires and plugs around. Pushrods do have witness marks on them, unfortunately. That's how I know, because on the stand turning the motor over there appears to be clearance, but clearly after running the motor, there is not. All the test so far point to a healthy bottom end and head gaskets, so hopefully it's just ignition related, and something silly like wires or plugs. I'm running nice firecore wires from my old indy headed stroker, but I have another set I can try as wellThe pushrods that you think are touching will have witness marks on them. Have you pulled the rocker shafts up to look at them? Having said that, don't think that is your problem. Rings can move around, you would probably need more run time for them to find their home. Again, they are not your problem. Keep looking at your ignition.
I just chased what ended up being a bad plug wire for couple weeks.I've had bad olug wires cause problems. Wires that by every Visual Indicator looked fine. Definitely worth trying new set.