Heres the easy way to determine the approximate Dcr of an assembled engine, on the engine stand.If youre careful, its pretty accurate.
Pick a cylinder.(I use no 1) Roll the engine over till the sparkplug hole is up, and is the highest point of the chamber.This is very important. All the air in that chamber has to come out of that hole, or your work will be for nothing.Put the piston at TDC.Measure out exactly one liter of heavy oil. Fill the entire chamber to the bottom of the plug hole.Write down the amount of fluid that went into there.If the oil level doesnt stabilize, its running past the rings, and your done.Either the oil is too thin or your ring gaps are too big, or the cylinder-to-ring interface is ndg.Move to another hole and start over, with thicker oil.
Next,back the piston down the bore to put the piston near the bottom of the compression stroke. Put your thumb on the hole, rotate the crank to bring the piston back up. As soon as you feel the slightest compression. stop.This represents the moment and point in the compression stroke that the intake valve is closed.( I like to use the short hose that comes with a Quality compression tester, and stick it in my mouth.This is very sensitive)So, next,carefully continue to pour the oil into the cylinder until its full.Determine the total volume of oil that went into the hole. I just look at how much is left in the beaker, and subtract that amount from the start amount. Write it down.
Using the formula Dcr = (SweptB + cv) / cv Plug in the numbers.
In this case, the first, smaller number is cv, and the second, larger number is actually SweptB + cv .
Example; lets say the first was 78cc, and the second was 702. Dcr = 702/78 = 9.0
This is a typical 366 with closed chamber heads, and a hot street cam(mine).
Have fun