Home · FAQ · New Posts · My Posts · PMs · Search · Members · Members Map · Calendar · Profile · Donate · Register · Log In |
Home > General > No compression |
|
|
AJ918 Member Since: 26 Mar 2018 Location: North West Posts: 260 |
If the valve timing is correct following belt failure, It's likely that you may have one or more bent valves, you would need to do a proper compression test to verify this. |
||
14th Sep 2019 7:57 pm |
|
jules Member Since: 13 Dec 2007 Location: The Wilds of Warwickshire Posts: 5021 |
Im assuming we are talking about a diesel. How did it "slip a few teeth". Im my limited experience cambelts give way completely and/or get thrown off by pulley failure. from If just got no compression in a cylinder (or several) then the gasses have leaked out somewhere - either through the valves or via the pistons. I had a Defender TD which gradually got more and more smokey - blue smoke and pressuring the crank case. Head off - all 4 pistons had indentations fron being being hit by valves during some previous cambelt failure before I bought it. The valves were fine (must have been replaced) but all 4 pistons had cracks in the crowns and 2 had holes you could see through . Yet it still started and ran. That triggered a V8 conversion. Jules |
||
14th Sep 2019 10:15 pm |
|
freelander2tom Member Since: 24 Jul 2017 Location: West midlands Posts: 37 |
From past experience working on diesel engines, especially HDI engines, when the cambelt snaps it damages the rocker arms which straight away take any pressure off the valves so it doesn't usually damage them, also I think if valve damage had occured it would be locking up on the valves when I'm trying to time it up, which it is not. I removed the head on my last fl2 due to a snapped cambelt and the valves were fine, thanks anyway I'll keep looking |
||
15th Sep 2019 7:37 am |
|
Mikey Member Since: 07 Jun 2008 Location: Dundee Posts: 780 |
Modern engines are very susceptible to spinning the cam lobes, giving the impression that it is timed up, but the cam lobes are all wrong... |
||
15th Sep 2019 7:38 am |
|
freelander2tom Member Since: 24 Jul 2017 Location: West midlands Posts: 37 |
Just removed the timing ring from the crank, there are chunks of rubber missing from where the cambelt broke, I'm aware this could prevent it from starting but won't explain the sound of no compression, I need to do a compression test |
||
15th Sep 2019 4:17 pm |
|
freelander2tom Member Since: 24 Jul 2017 Location: West midlands Posts: 37 |
It also seems to have plenty of compression when turning over by hand but when wizzed over on the starter it sounds like next to nothing |
||
15th Sep 2019 4:33 pm |
|
Steve D Member Since: 19 Jan 2013 Location: Essexshire Posts: 4109 |
So there are chunks of rubber missing from the new belt you have just fitted? Past: FL2 TD4 HSE Auto Evoque SD4 Dynamic Lux Auto Present: Audi A3 S Line. |
||
15th Sep 2019 8:31 pm |
|
freelander2tom Member Since: 24 Jul 2017 Location: West midlands Posts: 37 |
No from the rubber ring that the crank sensor picks up the timing signal from |
||
15th Sep 2019 10:14 pm |
|
freelander2tom Member Since: 24 Jul 2017 Location: West midlands Posts: 37 |
Any ideas? I'm stuck lol |
||
16th Sep 2019 9:07 pm |
|
Mikey Member Since: 07 Jun 2008 Location: Dundee Posts: 780 |
|
||
17th Sep 2019 5:34 am |
|
freelander2tom Member Since: 24 Jul 2017 Location: West midlands Posts: 37 |
Is it possible on the freelander? IV checked the cams and they seem solid unlike 1.6 HDI cams IV had loads of them spin |
||
17th Sep 2019 8:01 am |
|
|
All times are GMT |
< Previous Topic | Next Topic > |
Posting Rules
|
Site Copyright © 2006-2024 Futuranet Ltd & Martin Lewis