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Jeep engine psi


gas 44

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Without knowing that particular engine, I assume it's fairly low compression by design, so 80psi sounds reasonable for an old'un. The main thing to look for on any old engine is that all the pots are fairly similar. I speak as someone who has been tinkering with old LandRovers for forty-plus years.:nut:

 

John

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IIRC the range is like 105-115 with less than 10PSI diff from highest to lowest reading.

 

You really need to have a LEAK DOWN test down. A compression test will tall you the compression of the cylinder, but if its low it will not tell you WHAT to fix: Rings? Valves? Cylinder? Most mechanics will simply guess at a low PSI cylinder. Why sleeve a cylinder when the valves are the problem?

 

Any good shop should have a leakdown tester, or you can buy one (in the US they are about $30)

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You really need to have a LEAK DOWN test down. A compression test will tall you the compression of the cylinder, but if its low it will not tell you WHAT to fix: Rings? Valves? Cylinder? Most mechanics will simply guess at a low PSI cylinder. Why sleeve a cylinder when the valves are the problem?

 

 

 

You can usually tell if it is rings / bore by doing a second test with a drop of oil down the bore, anyway once you have determined it is low, then it has to have the head off for examination. Bore can be measured for wear, if not visually obvious. Another point to note is if two adjacent cylinders are low with virtually the same readings, this could indicate a head gasket blow, common on a lot of side valves where gaskets are narrow around the valve area.

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You can usually tell if it is rings / bore by doing a second test with a drop of oil down the bore, anyway once you have determined it is low, then it has to have the head off for examination. Bore can be measured for wear, if not visually obvious. Another point to note is if two adjacent cylinders are low with virtually the same readings, this could indicate a head gasket blow, common on a lot of side valves where gaskets are narrow around the valve area.

 

There are some haphazard ways to try and determine the health of a cylinder. The best and easiest way, hands down, is with a leak down tester. Its an all in one test that can rule out valves, cylinder and rings in one shot.. and you can take all day to do it (as long as you have air).

 

You can use a compression gauge and various potions and incantations.. that might get you close. But the ease of which a leak down test will get you the same info is so much easier and faster.

 

I would never allow (or perform) an engine disassembly on a hunch. The costs and wasted time looking at the wrong components is just that.. a waste. On a compression thest the following things can affect the readings: valve timing, starters ability to crank engine, battery amperage/voltage. A leakdown test can be done on the entire length of the power of compression stroke (as long as the valves are closed).

 

Proper tool for the job. In 2011 that tool is a leak down tester.

 

I have not looked extensively, but I do not believe that the Tms for the GPW or MB even list a compression psi. Only that they are 6.5:1 compression ratio engines.

Edited by deadline
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Whats an EMRS?

 

 

 

 

It is EMER to be precise. Electrical and Mechanical Engineering Regulations. These are British Army technical publications to cover all aspects of engineering within. Even if the equipment is made outside of the UK, there will be data of some sort covered in EMER's. They started off in WW2.

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  • 1 month later...

Hi everyone,thankyou all for your input and special thanks to "alant" for his very kind offer.

Just an update really,after getting the engine to start (and thats a story in its self) we found that we did indeed have a psi of 105 when warm which is about on the button as to what people posted here.

Thanks again

 

Gary

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  • 3 months later...

I just re-set the tappets on my Jeep today. Prior to adjusting I was getting 86-105-105-105psi. The tappet gaps had closed up or were non-existant, so were re-set to 0.014 thou. After re-setting, the cylinder pressures were checked again and were all around the 115-120psi range.

 

tappet3.jpg

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Hi Steve,thanks for the info and update.

Maybe you could come over to do ours ;);).

After getting the jeep engine running we have fully stripped the whole jeep to nuts and bolts.We were horrified at the state of the chassis,still now work in progress.

We are still a long way off....so far that we have brought a dodge(wc 51) to play with in the mean time.

Had a good run to Wickstead at the weekend and pleased with the drive of the dodge after nearly getting to grips with the down shifting.:)

Thanks again.

PS I wished my models looked like yours.

 

Gary

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